COVID-19: New Cases Decline By 19% Worldwide, Deaths Stabilize

COVID-19: New Cases Decline By 19% Worldwide, Deaths Stabilize

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By Spy Uganda 

WHO says just over 16 million new COVID-19 infections and about 75,000 deaths were reported worldwide last week.

The number of new COVID-19 cases worldwide has dropped by 19 percent in the past week, while recorded deaths remain stable, according to the World Health Organizationโ€™s (WHO) latest report on the coronavirus pandemic.

The United Nationsโ€™ health agency said late on Tuesday that โ€œjust over 16 million new cases and just under 75,000 new deaths were reportedโ€ globally during the week of February 7 to February 13.

The Western Pacific was the only region to report an increase in new weekly cases, a rise of about 19 percent. Southeast Asia recorded a drop of about 37 percent, the biggest decrease across the six WHO regions. (https://hydrogen.aero/)

The biggest number of new COVID-19 cases was seen in Russia. Cases there and elsewhere in Eastern Europe doubled in recent weeks, driven by a surge of the hugely infectious Omicron variant.

Meanwhile, the number of deaths rose by 38 percent in the Eastern Mediterranean region and by about one-third in the Western Pacific, according to the WHOโ€™s weekly report.

WHO said that all other coronavirus variants, including Alpha, Beta and Delta, continue to decline globally as Omicron crowds them out.

Among the more than 400,000 COVID-19 virus sequences uploaded to the worldโ€™s biggest virus database in the last week, more than 98 percent were Omicron.

WHO said the BA.2 version of Omicron appears to be โ€œsteadily increasingโ€ and its prevalence has risen in South Africa, Denmark, the UK and other countries.

Health officials have noted, however, that Omicron causes milder disease than previous COVID-19 variants and in countries with high vaccination rates, hospitalisation and death rates have not increased substantially, even with Omicronโ€™s spread.

WHOโ€™s Africa director, Dr Matshidiso Moeti, said last week there was โ€œlight at the end of the tunnelโ€ for the continent and that even despite low vaccination rates, Africa was transitioning from the acute pandemic phase of COVID-19.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has said repeatedly the pandemic is not over and it is premature for countries to think that the end might be imminent.

โ€œOur expectation is that the acute phase of this pandemic will end this year, of course with one condition, the 70 percent vaccination [target is achieved] by mid this year around June, July,โ€ he told reporters in South Africa last week.

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