COLUMBUS — The Ohio Dept. of Health on Tuesday reported the Bureau of Infectious Disease cleared the backlog of pending COVID-19 files dating back to Nov. 1, causing a one-day spike in cases to 25,721.

Included in the reported cases were the results from approximately 13,000 that were part of the report backlog. The onset date for these cases have been backfilled and appropriately recorded, according to ODH.

“After understanding more about antigen tests, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), changed their case definition in August, allowing antigen tests to be included in case counts without additional verification,” said ODH Chief Medical Officer Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff.

“ODH is now aligned with CDC’s current definition and we will begin reflecting those tests immediately in our daily reported case counts moving forward,” Vanderhoff said.

At the beginning of the pandemic, only PCR tests were available for the diagnosis of COVID-19.

As antigen tests were developed in the spring, the CDC issued guidance that allowed for a positive antigen test to be counted as a probable case only if additional criteria were met.

The additional criteria included either an epidemiological link to a known case of COVID-19, or symptoms of COVID-19.

As healthcare providers and public health professionals have become more familiar with antigen tests, and it plays a greater role in the overall testing strategy of the state, ODH will now be adopting the CDC definitions, the agency reported.

All cases, whether confirmed or probable, from a PCR or antigen tests, will still go through the same case investigation and interview process. The adoption of new case definitions simply allows for ODH to count probable cases from antigen tests in a more timely manner, which means all Ohioans will have a more accurate, real-time understanding of the spread of COVID-19.

For the public, the information seen on coronavirus.ohio.gov will largely remain the same. Users will still be able to see cases by total counts, confirmed counts, and probable counts on the main dashboard.

On the testing dashboard, users will be able to toggle between PCR-only, antigen-only, and combined testing volumes and positivity rates. Ohio will add these test results to our positivity calculation in the coming days, ODH said.

More information on the overall numbers can be found on the coronavirus.ohio.gov website.