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Overseas Virus Numbers Continuing to Climb

by | Fri, Jul 3 2020

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The United States and South Africa have both reported record new daily coronavirus infections, with US figures surpassing 50,000 cases in a day for the first time, underlining the challenges still ahead as countries press to reopen their virus-devastated economies.

The US recorded 50,700 new cases, according to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University, as many states struggled to contain the spread of the pandemic, blamed in part on people not wearing masks or following social distancing rules.

Surging numbers in California prompted Governor Gavin Newsom to announce just ahead of the Fourth of July weekend that he was closing bars, theatres and indoor restaurant dining over most of the state, a region that includes about 30 million people and Los Angeles County.

“The bottom line is the spread of this virus continues at a rate that is particularly concerning,” Newsom said.

Confirmed cases in California have increased nearly 50 per cent over the past two weeks and COVID-19 hospitalisations have gone up 43 per cent.

The US has now reported nearly 2.7 million cases and more than 128,000 dead.

Globally there have been 10.7 million coronavirus cases and more than 516,000 dead, according to Johns Hopkins’ count.

The true toll of the pandemic is believed to be significantly higher, in part because of limited testing and mild cases that have been missed.

In South Africa on Thursday, authorities reported 8124 new cases, a new daily record.

The country has the most cases in Africa with more than 159,000 as it loosens what had been one of the world’s strictest lockdowns.

Johannesburg is a new hot spot with hundreds of health workers infected and Gauteng province, which includes Johannesburg, has more than 45,000 confirmed cases.

The African continent has more than 405,000 confirmed cases overall.

India, the world’s second-most populous country with more than 1.3 billion people, surpassed 600,000 infections on Thursday after more than 19,000 new cases were reported.

India has reported nearly 100,000 new cases in the past four days alone.

Despite the surging numbers, the western beach state of Goa, a popular backpacking destination, allowed 250 hotels to reopen on Thursday after being closed for more than three months.

Tourists will either have to carry COVID-19 negative certificates or get tested on arrival.

On the medical front, the World Health Organisation says smoking is linked to a higher risk of severe illness and death from the coronavirus in hospitalised patients, although it was unable to specify exactly how much greater those risks might be.

In a scientific brief published this week, the UN health agency reviewed 34 published studies on the association between smoking and COVID-19, including the probability of infection, hospitalisation, severity of disease and death.

WHO noted that smokers represent up to 18 per cent of hospitalised coronavirus patients and that there appeared to be a significant link between whether or not patients smoked and the severity of disease they suffered, the type of hospital interventions required and patients’ risk of dying.

In Japan, the capital of Tokyo confirmed 107 new cases of coronavirus, nearly triple that of June 24, just before the number began to spike.

Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said many cases were linked to nightclubs and bars, and urged their workers to proactively be tested and take further safety measures.

“We need to use caution against the spread of the infections,” Koike said.

South Korea confirmed 54 more COVID-19 cases as the coronavirus continued to spread beyond the capital region and reach cities like Gwangju, which has shut schools and tightened social restrictions after dozens fell sick this week.

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