Chattanooga Times Free Press

Global virus death toll hits 2 million Friday,

- BY CHRIS SHERMAN, MARIA CHENG, JOHN LEICESTER AND JOSHUA GOODMAN

MEXICO CITY — The global death toll from COVID-19 topped 2 million Friday, crossing the threshold amid a vaccine rollout so immense but so uneven that in some countries there is real hope of vanquishin­g the outbreak, while in other, less-developed parts of the world, it seems a far-off dream.

The numbing figure was reached just over a year after the coronaviru­s was first detected in the Chinese city of Wuhan. The number of dead, compiled by Johns Hopkins University, is about equal to the population of Brussels, Mecca, Minsk or Vienna. It is roughly equivalent to the Cleveland metropolit­an area or the entire state of Nebraska.

“There’s been a terrible amount of death,” said Dr. Ashish Jha, a pandemic expert and dean of Brown University’s School of Public Health. At the same time, he said, “our scientific community has also done extraordin­ary work.”

In wealthy countries including the United States, Britain, Israel, Canada and Germany, millions of citizens have already been given some measure of protection with at least one dose of vaccine developed with revolution­ary speed and quickly authorized for use.

But elsewhere, immunizati­on drives have barely gotten off the ground. Many experts are predicting another year of loss and hardship in places like Iran, India, Mexico and Brazil, which together account for about a quarter of the world’s deaths.

“As a country, as a society, as citizens we haven’t understood,” lamented Israel Gomez, a Mexico City paramedic who spent months shuttling COVID-19 patients around by ambulance, desperatel­y looking for vacant hospital beds. “We have not understood that this is not a game, that this really exists.”

Mexico, a country of 130 million people, has received just 500,000 doses of vaccine and has put barely half of those into the arms of health care workers.

That’s in sharp contrast to the situation for its wealthier northern neighbor. Despite early delays, hundreds of thousands of people are rolling up their sleeves every day in the United States, where the virus has killed about 390,000, by far the highest toll of any country.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/EDMAR BARROS ?? Cemetery workers carry the remains of 89-year-old Abilio Ribeiro, who died of the coronaviru­s, to bury at the Nossa Senhora Aparecida cemetery in Manaus, Brazil.
AP FILE PHOTO/EDMAR BARROS Cemetery workers carry the remains of 89-year-old Abilio Ribeiro, who died of the coronaviru­s, to bury at the Nossa Senhora Aparecida cemetery in Manaus, Brazil.

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