<p>Bengaluru's death toll climbed up by another 70 fatalities on Thursday even as the burden of the disease reached a new record milestone of 2,344 new cases. </p>.<p>This spike took the city’s total cases to 25,288, of which 18,828 (or 74.4%) are active cases. The death toll is now officially 507. </p>.<p>Over the past three days, details of 186 past deaths have been disclosed, all of which happened several days ago.</p>.<p>According to the data by the Department of Health and Family Welfare, there have been zero deaths since 15 July. </p>.<p>Various citizen volunteer groups on the ground, involved in patient welfare, however, told <span class="italic">DH</span> of multiple fatalities happening every day. </p>.<p><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-48-people-test-positive-at-telangana-raj-bhavan-indias-tally-jumps-past-87-lakh-mark-death-toll-crosses-23000-860261.html" target="_blank"><strong>For latest updates and live news on coronavirus, click here</strong></a></p>.<p>"We don’t know why some of these are not being reported in a timely manner," said a citizen volunteer involved in securing beds for patients, speaking on the condition of anonymity. </p>.<p>The existing data shows that 18 of the newly disclosed deaths actually took place on July 3, while 16 took place on July 2.</p>.<p>Of these, seven died at home and another 17 died within hours of being identified as Covid-positive. </p>.<p>Officials maintained that especially in the case of those with late or non-diagnosis of the disease, extra time is required to verify the bulk of the fatalities, many of whom came too late for treatment. </p>.<p class="CrossHead"><strong>Backlog of deaths</strong></p>.<p>According to the data available so far, the highest number of fatalities registered in a single day was on July 2, when a total of 38 people are confirmed to have died. The next highest total was on the following day when 37 people died. </p>.<p>The figures for these two days could potentially increase in coming days as the Bengaluru Bruhat Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) releases further information from its backlog of fatalities, which according to a source, numbers several hundred. </p>.<p>BBMP Commissioner B H Anil Kumar could not be reached for comment on this backlog. </p>.<p>Meantime, although 92 patients were admitted into private hospitals in the state on Thursday, none was in Bengaluru Urban. There were also no records of patients being admitted into home isolation. </p>.<p>Out of Thursday’s new cases, 1,426 were males and 918 were females. Between them, 715 cases were recorded as being people with symptoms of Influenza-Like Illness and 209 were people with Severe Acute Respiratory Infection. </p>.<p>According to data from the BBMP War Room, no swabs were collected on Thursday. Meantime, the number of containment zones has shot up to 7,053 from 4,616 four days ago. </p>
<p>Bengaluru's death toll climbed up by another 70 fatalities on Thursday even as the burden of the disease reached a new record milestone of 2,344 new cases. </p>.<p>This spike took the city’s total cases to 25,288, of which 18,828 (or 74.4%) are active cases. The death toll is now officially 507. </p>.<p>Over the past three days, details of 186 past deaths have been disclosed, all of which happened several days ago.</p>.<p>According to the data by the Department of Health and Family Welfare, there have been zero deaths since 15 July. </p>.<p>Various citizen volunteer groups on the ground, involved in patient welfare, however, told <span class="italic">DH</span> of multiple fatalities happening every day. </p>.<p><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-48-people-test-positive-at-telangana-raj-bhavan-indias-tally-jumps-past-87-lakh-mark-death-toll-crosses-23000-860261.html" target="_blank"><strong>For latest updates and live news on coronavirus, click here</strong></a></p>.<p>"We don’t know why some of these are not being reported in a timely manner," said a citizen volunteer involved in securing beds for patients, speaking on the condition of anonymity. </p>.<p>The existing data shows that 18 of the newly disclosed deaths actually took place on July 3, while 16 took place on July 2.</p>.<p>Of these, seven died at home and another 17 died within hours of being identified as Covid-positive. </p>.<p>Officials maintained that especially in the case of those with late or non-diagnosis of the disease, extra time is required to verify the bulk of the fatalities, many of whom came too late for treatment. </p>.<p class="CrossHead"><strong>Backlog of deaths</strong></p>.<p>According to the data available so far, the highest number of fatalities registered in a single day was on July 2, when a total of 38 people are confirmed to have died. The next highest total was on the following day when 37 people died. </p>.<p>The figures for these two days could potentially increase in coming days as the Bengaluru Bruhat Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) releases further information from its backlog of fatalities, which according to a source, numbers several hundred. </p>.<p>BBMP Commissioner B H Anil Kumar could not be reached for comment on this backlog. </p>.<p>Meantime, although 92 patients were admitted into private hospitals in the state on Thursday, none was in Bengaluru Urban. There were also no records of patients being admitted into home isolation. </p>.<p>Out of Thursday’s new cases, 1,426 were males and 918 were females. Between them, 715 cases were recorded as being people with symptoms of Influenza-Like Illness and 209 were people with Severe Acute Respiratory Infection. </p>.<p>According to data from the BBMP War Room, no swabs were collected on Thursday. Meantime, the number of containment zones has shot up to 7,053 from 4,616 four days ago. </p>