Japan Herald
18 Feb 2021, 07:14 GMT+10
81,000 people died as a result of Covid-19 in the past week, while 2.7 million new cases were reported.
While the figures are shocking, they reflect a trend that is beginning to indicate that the Covid-19 pandemic may be peaking.
While 2.7 million new infections is alarming, it is actually 500,000 cases fewer than the week before, a 16 percent drop.
The number of deaths at 81,000 was also 10 percent lower than the previous week.
In releasing the figures on Tuesday in its weekly update, the World Health Organization (WHO) said that although the number of global infections has fallen, regions, including Europe, are still in the grip of the virus whose variants are spreading.
While many lockdowns are still in place in regions across the world, and tight restrictions, including safe-distancing and the wearing of masks are either recommended or mandatory, it is no time for complacency.
Despite the slowing numbers, the total number of people to have contracted the coronavirus has just passed 108 million, and the number of deaths has topped 2.3 million.
Five-out-of-six regions reported a double-digit percentage drop in the number of new cases, with Russia recording an 11 percent decrease, the United States a 23 percent drop and the United Kingdom a 27 percent fall.
Only infections in the Eastern Mediterranean Region increased, by seven percent.
The UN health agency data, which is gathered from its global membership, also said that the European and Americas regions continue to see the greatest drops in absolute numbers of COVID-19 cases.
In some European countries, this is "likely (owing) to a strong combination of public health and social measures", the UN agency said, before cautioning that the majority of European nations continue to experience "high or increasing" infection rates among older age groups "and/or high death rates".
It cited France, UK, Russia, the U.S. and Brazil as having the highest case tally in the past week.
Detailing the spread of the three main COVID-19 mutations, which have raised concerns over faster virus transmission and whether they are less susceptible to available vaccines, WHO said that the so-called "UK variant" (VOC 202012/01) is now present in 94 countries across all regions eight more than the previous week.
The "South African variant" (VOC202012/02) has been traced in 46 countries, an increase of two, while the "Brazilian/Japanese variant" (P.1) is present in 21 countries, up by six.
Citing genetic sampling of the UK variant, the WHO report noted that the proportion of people infected with VOC 202012/01 "has increased in the past weeks, indicating community transmission in a number of countries."
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