Question Author
Points about precise cause of death are relevant but so long as they always use consistent criteria (e.g. the medical equivalent of the legal concept of proximate cause) the stats won't be skewed. My point is about undisclosed cases. These will probably increase with greater public awareness.
This not scare-mongering. Joe Bloggs as described, if indeed not longer infectious, is apparently no longer a threat. As for these omissions from the official stats, there is no problem as it is the trend that really matters. Bear in mind that the numbers stated today are 10 to 14 days out of date and hopefully the graph will flatten out a bit as the public increasingly observe sensible safety measures (again, it will take to the end of the month to kick in and affect the stats).
Non-disclosure cases have the small disadvantage that it rules out contact listing and tracing. I'm not sure how much they still do that here in UK, maybe the numbers are too great now. In any case it has created problems elsewhere with identities being revealed and the infected folk (even when recovered) being victimised and trolled.
Meanwhile be careful, folks, and stay healthy.