Deutsche Welle (English edition)

COVID: Europe may see 236,000 deaths by December, WHO fears

Stagnating vaccinatio­n rates and accelerate­d transmissi­on of the virus could contribute to over a quarter of a million Europeans dying from coronaviru­s-related problems before Christmas.

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The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) expressed concern Monday about the rising transmissi­on rates of coronaviru­s in Europe.

"Last week, there was an 11% increase in the number of deaths in the region — one reliable projection is expecting 236,000 deaths in Europe, by December 1," the agency's Europe director Hans Kluge told a press conference in Copenhagen.

So far Europe has recorded around 1.3 million coronaviru­s deaths since the pandemic began.

Why are COVID deaths set to rise in Europe?

The WHO Europe chief explained that there were three worrying factors: high transmissi­on rates, slowing vaccinatio­ns and the easing of restrictio­ns.

Kluge said that 33 out of the WHO Europe's 53 member states had an infection rate greater than 10% in the past two weeks, largely driven by the highly contagious delta variant.

The rapid spread of the virus was "deeply worrying, particular­ly in the light of low vaccinatio­n uptake in priority population­s in a number of countries," Kluge said.

"In the past six weeks, it has fallen by 14%, influenced by a

lack of access to vaccines in some countries and a lack of vaccine acceptance in others," he added.

Although around half of Europeans are now fully vaccinated, the number of people receiving shots has slowed. The rate of vaccinatio­n was lower in poorer European countries, with some only having managed to vaccinate around 10% of healthcare workers.

An "exaggerate­d easing" of restrictio­ns and a surge in people traveling abroad for the summer have also added to the spread of the virus.

The WHO stance on COVID booster shots WHO Europe also countered a claim made by the global WHO body earlier in the month that data did not support the use of COVID-19 booster shots.

"A third dose of vaccine is not a luxury booster (that is) taken away from someone who is still waiting for a first jab. It's basically a way to keep the most vulnerable safe," Kluge told the press briefing.

"We have to be a little bit careful with the booster shot, because there is not yet enough evidence," he added.

"But more and more studies show that a third dose keeps vulnerable people safe, and this is done by more and more countries in our region," he said.

Some European countries have already started administer­ing booster shots to the most vulnerable after suggestion­s that the vaccine loses some of its effectiven­ess after several months.

 ??  ?? The WHO has warned of rising infection rates amid stagnating vaccinatio­ns
The WHO has warned of rising infection rates amid stagnating vaccinatio­ns

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