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The Financial Express

Global COVID-19 cases surpass 200 million

| Updated: August 06, 2021 19:16:04


A man is consoled by his relative as he sees the body of his father, who died from complications related to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), before his burial at a graveyard in New Delhi of India on April 16 this year -Reuters file photo A man is consoled by his relative as he sees the body of his father, who died from complications related to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), before his burial at a graveyard in New Delhi of India on April 16 this year -Reuters file photo

Coronavirus cases worldwide surpassed 200 million on Wednesday, according to a Reuters tally, as the Delta variant threatens areas with low vaccination rates.

Cases are rising in at least 83 out of 240 countries, according to the tally, and straining healthcare systems.

"While we desperately want to be done with this pandemic, COVID-19 is clearly not done with us. And so, our battle must last a little longer," Dr Rochelle Walensky, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said this week.

At least 2.6 per cent of the world's population has been infected, with the true figure likely higher due to limited testing in many places. If the number of infected people was a country, it would be the eighth-most populous in the world, behind Nigeria, according to a Reuters analysis.

It took over a year for COVID-19 cases to hit the 100-million mark, while the next 100 million were reported in just over six months, according to the analysis. The pandemic has left close to 4.4 million people dead.

The countries reporting the most cases on a seven-day average - the United States, Brazil, Indonesia, India and Iran - represent about 38 per cent of all global cases reported each day.

The United States accounts for one in every seven infections reported worldwide. US states with low vaccination rates such as Florida and Louisiana are seeing record numbers of COVID patients hospitalised, despite the nation giving 70 per cent of adults at least one vaccine shot. The head of one Louisiana hospital warned of the "darkest days" yet.

Unvaccinated people represent nearly 97 per cent of severe cases, according to the White House COVID-19 Response Team.

RISING CASES IN ASIA

Countries in Southeast Asia are also reporting rising cases. With just 8 per cent of the world's population, the region is reporting almost 15 per cent of all global cases each day, according to a Reuters analysis.

Indonesia, which faced an exponential surge in COVID-19 cases in July, is reporting the most deaths on average and surpassed 100,000 total deaths on Wednesday. The country accounts for one in every five deaths reported worldwide each day. The Southeast Asian nation aims to gradually reopen its economy in September, Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin said on Monday, citing that the wave of infections had passed its peak, with daily confirmed cases on the decline.

After suffering its worst outbreak in April-May, India is once again seeing a rising trend of cases. Last Friday, the country reported 44,230 new COVID-19 cases, the most in three weeks, fuelling worries of a third wave of infections that have forced one state to lockdown.

China's Wuhan city, where the virus first emerged in late 2019, will test its 12 million residents for the coronavirus after confirming its first domestic cases of the Delta variant. The city had reported no local cases since mid-May last year.

The Delta variant is upending all assumptions about the virus, with disease experts scrambling to find whether the latest version of coronavirus is making people, especially unvaccinated individuals, sicker than before.

The CDC said in an internal document that the variant, first detected in India, is as contagious as chickenpox and far more contagious than the common cold or flu.

A key issue, said Dr Gregory Poland, a vaccine scientist at the Mayo Clinic, is that the current vaccines block disease, but they do not block infection by keeping the virus from replicating in the nose.

As a result, he said, "the vaccines we have currently are not going to be the be-all, end-all," he said. "We are now in a scenario of our own making, where this is going to be years to decades to now defeat. ... And we're going to chase our tail with variants until we get a type of vaccine that offers infection and disease-blocking capabilities."

Many countries are still facing shortages of testing kits, medicines and vaccines, as the Delta variant strains healthcare services in poorer nations. Wealthier nations are being urged to donate more vaccines to curb the outbreak globally.

The World Health Organization (WHO) is seeking $11.5 billion to fight the Delta outbreak, a draft report seen by Reuters shows, amid worries wealthy nations are partly bypassing its COVID-19 programmes.

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