National Post

Youth lead surge in COVID cases, WHO says

- Ankur Banerjee and Stephanie Nebehay

Young people who are hitting nightclubs and beaches are leading a rise in fresh coronaviru­s cases across the world, with the proportion of those aged 15 to 24 who are infected rising threefold in about five months, the World Health Organizati­on said.

An analysis by the WHO of six million infections between Feb. 24 and July 12 found that the share of people aged 15 to 24 rose to 15 per cent from 4.5 per cent.

Apart from the United States which leads a global tally with 4.8 million total cases, European countries including Spain, Germany and France, and Asian countries such as Japan, have said that many of the newly infected are young people.

“Younger people tend to be less vigilant about masking and social- distancing,” Neysa Ernst, nurse manager at Johns Hopkins Hospital’s biocontain­ment unit in Baltimore, Maryland told Reuters in an email.

“Travel increases your chances of getting and spreading COVID-19,” she said, adding young people are more likely to go to work in the community, to a beach or the pub, or to buy groceries.

The surge in new cases, a so- called second wave of infections, has prompted some countries to impose new curbs on travel even as companies race to find a vaccine for the fast- spreading virus that has claimed more than 680,000 lives and upended economies.

Even countries such as Vietnam, widely praised for its mitigation efforts since the coronaviru­s appeared in late January, are battling new clusters of infection.

Among those aged five to 14 years, about 4.6 per cent were infected, up from 0.8 per cent, between Feb. 24 and July 12, the WHO said, at a time when testing has risen and public health experts are concerned that reopening of schools may lead to a surge in cases.

Anthony Fauci, the leading U. S. expert on infectious diseases, urged young people last month to continue to socially distance, wear masks and avoid crowds, and cautioned that asymptomat­ic people could spread the virus, too.

Indeed, health experts in several countries have urged similar measures as they report that infected youth show few symptoms.

“We’ve said this before and we’ll say it again: young people are not invincible,” WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said in Geneva last week.

“Young people can be infected; young people can die; and young people can transmit the virus to others.”

Last month, Tokyo officials said they would conduct coronaviru­s testing in the city’s nightlife districts, and instructed nightclubs to provide customers with enough space with good ventilatio­n and to ask them to avoid speaking loudly.

In France last month, authoritie­s closed a bar where people breached hygiene rules and caused an outbreak.

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