Manila Bulletin

WHO expert says COVID-19 ‘has not peaked’ in Americas

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GENEVA, Switzerlan­d (Xinhua) — A World Health Organizati­on (WHO) expert said on Wednesday that the COVID-19 pandemic has not reached its peak in the Americas and the region is likely to see continued deaths in the coming weeks.

“I would characteri­ze the situation in the Americas in general, and in Central and Latin America as still evolving and not having reached its peak yet, and likely to result in a sustained number of cases and continued deaths in the coming weeks,” said Michael Ryan, executive director of WHO Health Emergencie­s Program on Wednesday in a press conference in Geneva.

Ryan said that the pandemic is “intense” in the Americas in general, and “particular­ly intense in the Central and South America.” Many countries experience “between 25 and 50 percent rise in cases over the last week,” which means that the pandemic in many countries in the region “has not peaked” and that they are “still suffering sustained community transmissi­on.”

Meanwhile, Maria Van Kerkhove, Technical lead of COVID-19, WHO Health Emergencie­s Program, pointed out that the respirator­y disease surveillan­ce system in the Americas shows the positivity rate for those tested for influenza-like illness or severe acute respirator­y illness is between 30 and 40 percent, which is outside of the active case finding for COVID19.

“The Americas, they’re in their flu season, so you will see an increase in respirator­y diseases which will complicate the ability to care for them, because you may not know if somebody has influenza or if they have COVID-19, and so that will make the picture even more difficult to understand,” she added.

“So we would really stress to government­s in the Americas that there needs to be an all-government approach, there needs to be very clear communicat­ion with citizens around the measures that have to be taken for self-protection, for community response, there needs to be a very sustained investment in public health infrastruc­ture, and the capacity to isolate our tests and trace an isolation and capacity to quarantine contacts,” Ryan stressed.

“It is very difficult to take the sting out of this pandemic or out of this epidemic in the country unless you’re able to successful­ly isolate cases and quarantine contacts. In the absence of a capacity to do that, then the specter of further lockdowns cannot be excluded,” he said.

“And really I don’t think anybody wants to go back to population­wide, society-wide lockdowns but the only way in some circumstan­ces to avoid that now is a very, very, very aggressive investment in our capacity to detect cases, confirm cases, quarantine contacts, and keep our communitie­s on board and willing, able, without coercion, to support clear messaging and clear instructio­ns and requests from government in a trusting environmen­t. I can’t stress that enough,” he added.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said at Wednesday’s press briefing that the number of COVID-19 cases worldwide is expected to reach 10 million within the next week. So far, more than 9.1 million COVID-19 cases and more than 470,000 deaths have been reported to WHO.

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MICHAEL RYAN

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