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Officials concerned by ‘sustained’ Covid-19 increase in region

Health Minister Carla Vizzotti says “controls” will be strengthen­ed in response to “worrying increase” in infections across Latin America.

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Health Minister Carla Vizzotti says that the government is disturbed by the rise in Covid-19 infections across the region and is planning to tighten border controls and “care measures” as a result.

President Alberto Fernández on Friday

headed a new meeting of the Vaccinatio­n Committee against coronaviru­s at the Casa Rosada, at which officials admitted to an official “concern” about the increase of Covid-19 cases across Latin America.

“There is a sustained and worrying increase in countries across the region,” said Vizzotti, who went on to express concerns over new strains of the virus that are circulatin­g.

On Monday WHO directorge­neral Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s declared a health emergency for all Latin America after a new variant of Covid-19 was detected in Brazil.

“The situation is very serious and we are very worried. Brazil’s health measures should be aggressive while at the same time advancing in vaccinatio­n,” said the WHO chief while adding: “The worry not only concerns Brazil but also its neighbours” and pointing out: “And that’s almost all South America.”

On Thursday the government restricted flights to Europe, the United States, Brazil and several Latin American countries in a bid to keep the new strains of Covid-19 at bay.

Vizzotti said the government wanted to “delay an increase in cases [in Argentina] as long as possible,” in order to “vaccinate more people.” The minister affirmed that all controls and precaution­s would be multiplied, asserting that the protocols applied thus far “had had a very positive impact.”

Meanwhile the vaccinatio­n campaign continues to suffer delay from the slow arrival of doses with the recent “VIP vaccine” scandal providing an extra incentive to speed up inoculatio­n before the arrival of the second wave of Covid-19.

EMERGENCY EXTENDED

On Thursday, the government rolled over the existing health emergency for the coronaviru­s pandemic until the end of 2021, extending a decree signed by President Alberto Fernández.

The health emergency was initially declared by the government exactly a year ago yesterday via Decree N° 260, which extended “for the period of one year the public health emergency establishe­d by Law 27.541 in view of the pandemic declared by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) in relation to coronaviru­s Covid-19,” also naming the Health Ministry as “the authority of applicatio­n.”

The health emergency will thus continue nationwide for over 21 months at least.

VACCINE PUSH

Attention once again fell on Argentina’s mass vaccinatio­n programme this week, with Buenos Aires City Mayor Horacio Rodríguez Larreta coming in for criticism after elderly porteños were left queuing for jabs in the sun for hours.

The mayor was forced onto the defensive after chaotic scenes of long queues and tired OAPS lined up outside the City’s Luna Park stadium were broadcast across news channels.

Declaring that he would “never make caring for people a political issue,” Rodríguez Larreta rejected criticism that vaccines were not given out quick enough and said the City’s operation was dependent on “the rate of delivery” from the national government.

As of Friday 6pm, the national government had distribute­d more than 3.4 million vaccine doses from the 4.05 million currently in the country. A total of 179,131 shots were administer­ed Friday, according to the Public Vaccinatio­n Monitor, while the total for the week was 551,507.

Some 1.8 million have now been given their first dose, with 406,000 also receiving the second. On Thursday alone, a record 149,000 shots were given.

On Wednesday, the Fernández administra­tion confirmed that another three million doses of the jab produced by the Chinese laboratory Sinopharm would arrive in Argentina next week.

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