Home NewsInternational Global COVID-19 infections rise for 4th consecutive week – WHO

Global COVID-19 infections rise for 4th consecutive week – WHO

by Haruna Gimba

By Haruna Gimba

COVID-19 confirmed cases continued to rise around the world for a fourth consecutive week, with around 3.3 million new cases reported in the past seven-day period, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said.

The number of new deaths from the Coronavirus leveled off after a six-week decrease, with just over 60,000 new deaths reported.

Europe and the Americas continued to account for nearly eight in 10 of all cases and deaths, while the only region to report a decline in fatalities was the Western Pacific, down nearly a third, compared to the previous week.

Infections rose notably in South East Asia, the Western Pacific, Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean, according to the World Health Organization’s Weekly Epidemiological Update.

In the African region and the Americas, infection numbers have remained stable in recent weeks, although WHO pointed to “concerning trends” in some countries within these regions.

These include Brazil, where the highest numbers of new cases were reported (508,010 new cases in a week, representing a three per cent increase)

The United States saw 374,369 new cases – a 19 per cent decrease – while India saw 240,082 new cases, a 62 per cent increase, France saw 204,840 new cases (up 27 per cent) and Italy saw little change, with a recorded 154,493 new cases.

WHO said that latest data on coronavirus variants of concern indicate that the so-called “UK” strain is present in 125 countries, across all six global regions.

This variant – VOC202012/01 – may be associated with an increased risk of hospitalization, severity and mortality, WHO noted, pointing to a study involving 55,000 COVID-19 patients between last October and January, where deaths from the UK variant were 4.1 per 1,000, compared with 2.5 per 1,000 among those infected with the previously circulating Coronavirus.

On a more positive note, data from vaccine tests conducted in England from December 2020 to February 2021 – when VOC202012/01 was very prevalent – “showed the early real-world effectiveness of the Pfizer/BioNTech – BNT162b2 vaccine and AstraZeneca – ChAdOx1 vaccine against confirmed COVID-19, hospitalizations and deaths,” WHO explained.

Globally, as of March 23, there have been 123,419,065 confirmed cases of COVID-19, including 2,719,163 deaths, reported to WHO.

As of 22 March 2021, a total of 403,269,879 vaccine doses have been administered.

Related Articles

Leave a Comment