There were 79 deaths related to Coronavirus in Italy over the last 24 hours, with 283 new cases, as the death toll has gone over 34,000.

The pandemic began with the first confirmed case on Italian soil in Codogno, Lombardy, on February 20.

Since then, there have been 34,043 deaths and 235,561 positive cases in the country.

Of the most recent 79 deaths, 15 were in the Lombardy region.

Another 283 positive tests emerged out of 55,003 swabs since yesterday, but 192 of those were in Lombardy.

There were 79 deaths related to Coronavirus in Italy over the last 24 hours, with 283 new cases, as the death toll has gone over 34,000.

The pandemic began with the first confirmed case on Italian soil in Codogno, Lombardy, on February 20.

Since then, there have been 34,043 deaths and 235,561 positive cases in the country.

Of the most recent 79 deaths, 15 were in the Lombardy region.

Another 283 positive tests emerged out of 55,003 swabs since yesterday, but 192 of those were in Lombardy.

The good news is that those who do become sick tend to recover much faster and do not require hospital treatment.

A further 2,062 were given the all-clear and the number of current active cases fell by 1,858 to just 32,872.

There are now just 263 patients in intensive care, 4,581 in hospital and 28,028 self-isolating at home with only minor symptoms.

The pandemic is increasingly localised to Lombardy, as 17 out of 21 regions have under 10 new positive tests and 16 of those have under five new cases.

The only outliers remain Lombardy (192), Lazio (23), Piedmont (21) and Emilia-Romagna (18).

This is all important for Serie A, because the lower the overall pandemic figures, the faster authorities will cut the 14-day quarantine period to seven or even allow fans back into the stadium.

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