Here is the data from Wikipedia, for reference.
Note that of the 14 deaths, five were in their 80s, five were in their 70s, one was in their 60s, and three families declined to state.
Also, of the 696 people who tested positive, 410 (59%) were asymptomatic.
-PJDeaths[edit]
# Date[a] Age Gnd. From[b] Notes Ref. 1 2020.02.20 87 M Japan (Kanagawa) Hospitalized on 2020.02.11[c] [2][89] 2 2020.02.20 84 F Japan (Tokyo) Hospitalized on 2020.02.12 [2][89] 3 2020.02.23 80s M Japan Hospitalized on 2020.02.05 [3] 4 2020.02.25 80s M Japan (Tokyo) Hospitalized on 2020.02.09 [4] 5 2020.02.28 70s F Japan (Tokyo) Hospitalized on 2020.02.07 [5] 6 2020.02.28 —[d] M United Kingdom First death of a UK citizen from COVID-19 [6][91] 7 2020.03.01 78 M Australia Evacuated to a hospital in Perth, Australia[e] [7] 8 2020.03.06 — M Hong Kong [8] 9 2020.03.19 70s M Canada [9] 10 2020.03.22 70s M Japan [10] 11 2020.03.22 70s M Japan [10] 12 2020.03.28 60s F Hong Kong [11] 13 2020.04.09 — — Japan [12] 14 2020.04.14 70s M Japan (Chiba) Hospitalized on 2020.02.07[f] [13]
Exactly, what it proved was that at least 50% of the population had a cross immunity to the virus. If hygiene had been practiced then the results would have been better, we learned a lot from that data that was ignored by the CDC and NIH.