For the first time, Michigan has published a count of 240 probable coronavirus deaths — the number of people who never tested positive for COVID-19 but were suspected to have died from the virus.    

The figure, when combined with the 5,615 confirmed COVID deaths through Friday, bumped the state’s death toll from the novel coronavirus 4% higher than previously thought — to 5,855 total when including the presumptive deaths. 

Public health experts have said the combined total, provided by the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, is a truer representation of the virus’s toll. 

That is in part because virus testing has been limited, and the official tally had so far only counted deaths where the individual had tested positive for COVID-19.

The state also released for the first time a count of 4,928 probable cases of COVID-19. Those presumptive cases increased the state’s total known cases by nearly 8% to 63,453 when added to the 58,525 cases confirmed by diagnostic testing through Friday. 

Officials also reported Friday that there had been 20 coronavirus deaths and 284 new cases of COVID-19 confirmed in the previous 24 hours. 

“We are continuing to improve the information we are providing as our goal is to share timely and accurate data during this pandemic,” said Dr. Joneigh Khaldun, chief medical executive, said in a statement.

Probable cases include individuals without a COVID-positive diagnostic lab test who were presumed to be infected due to their symptoms and an epidemiological link, according to the state health department. 

Probable deaths are those whose death certificate listed COVID-19 disease as a cause of death or a significant condition contributing to death.

Examples include sudden deaths at home attributed to COVID, deaths at the hospital before the individual could test positive, and patients who falsely tested negative but who were clinically considered a COVID case, experts said. 

Unsurprisingly, the bulk of the probable cases and deaths disclosed Friday were centered in Metro Detroit, which has experienced 61% of confirmed cases and 77% of deaths. 

Metro Detroit, including Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties, accounts for nearly 78% of COVID deaths when including the region’s presumptive deaths and 61% of cases when including probable cases. Detroit, Michigan’s largest city, had been a national hot spot for COVID-19 early in the pandemic and has led all cities in cases and deaths.

Detroit led the tally of presumptive deaths with 84. The city had another 308 probable cases of COVID-19 in contrast to nearly 11,000 confirmed cases and nearly 1,400 confirmed deaths. 

Michigan’s local health departments have been reporting both confirmed and probable COVID cases and deaths to the state for weeks.

Each local health department received guidance, along with recommendations to evaluate cases based on the national standard defined by the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists in April, state health department spokeswoman Lynn Sutfin has said. 

Additional information is necessary to define a probable death, requiring a report and then a public health investigation, so establishing this class of deaths takes longer, she said. Most would be found during contact monitoring of people potentially exposed to infection, Sutfin added.

Probable cases “provides a more complete picture about how COVID-19 has impacted the state,” she said recently. 

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