Chattanooga Times Free Press

No region in the world spared as virus cases, deaths surge

- BY VANESSA GERA

WARSAW, Poland — Hospitals in Turkey and Poland are filling up. Pakistan is restrictin­g domestic travel. The U.S. government will send more help to the state with the country’s worst infection increase.

The worldwide surge in coronaviru­s cases and deaths includes even Thailand, which has weathered the pandemic far better than many nations but now struggles to contain COVID-19.

The only exceptions to the deteriorat­ing situation are countries that have advanced vaccinatio­n programs, most notably Israel and Britain. The U.S., which is a vaccinatio­n leader globally, is also seeing a small uptick in new cases, and the White House announced Friday that it would send federal assistance to Michigan to control the state’s worstin-the-nation transmissi­on rate.

The World Health Organizati­on said infection rates are climbing in every global region, driven by new virus variants and too many countries coming out of lockdown too soon.

“We’ve seen rises [in cases] worldwide for six weeks. And now, sadly, we are seeing rises in deaths for the last three weeks,” Dr. Margaret Harris, a WHO spokeswoma­n, said at a briefing in Geneva.

In its weekly epidemiolo­gical update, the WHO said over 4 million COVID-19 cases were reported in the last week. New deaths increased by 11% compared to last week, with over 71,000 reported.

The increasing infections, hospitaliz­ations and deaths extend to countries where vaccinatio­ns are finally gaining momentum. That leaves even bleaker prospects for much of the world, where large-scale vaccinatio­n programs remain a more distant prospect.

In Turkey, which is among the badly hit countries, most new cases of the virus can be traced to a variant first found in Britain.

Ismail Cinel, head of the Turkish Intensive Care Associatio­n, said the surge was beginning to strain the nation’s relatively advanced health care system and “the alarm bells are ringing” for intensive care units, which are not yet at full capacity.

“The mutant form of the virus is causing more harm to the organs,” Cinel said. “While 2 out of 10 patients were dying previously, the number is now 4 out of 10. And if we continue this way, we will lose six.”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan eased COVID-19 restrictio­ns in early March to minimize pain to his nation’s ailing economy. The new spike forced him to announce renewed restrictio­ns, such as weekend lockdowns and the closure of cafes and restaurant­s during Ramadan, which starts April 13.

Turkish medical groups say the reopening in March was premature and that the new measures do not go far enough. They have been calling for full lockdowns during the holy Muslim month.

In the U.S. capital, President Joe Biden’s administra­tion outlined how the federal government planned to help Michigan better administer the doses already allocated to the state, as well as expand testing capacity and the availabili­ty of drugs. The effort will not include any extra vaccine doses, a move Gov. Gretchen Whitmer sought.

Doses are currently allocated to states proportion­ally by population. Whitmer has called for extra doses to be shifted to states like hers experienci­ng a sharp rise in cases. She also urged a voluntary two-week halt to in-person high school classes, youth sports and indoor restaurant dining, but stopped short of issuing new restrictio­ns.

In Brazil, which has the second-highest death toll in the world after the U.S., Sao Paulo has started night burials to cope with demand, and school vans have been used to transport coffins.

 ?? AP PHOTO/FELIPE DANA ?? COVID-19 patients are treated in the municipal hospital of Sao Joao de Meriti, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Thursday.
AP PHOTO/FELIPE DANA COVID-19 patients are treated in the municipal hospital of Sao Joao de Meriti, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Thursday.

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