La Semana

Coronaviru­s: Is Latin America the new epicenter?

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Coronaviru­s cases have been rising sharply in many Latin American countries, causing increasing concern to regional health authoritie­s.

Brazil has more than 370,000 confirmed cases the second highest in the world.

Other countries in the region, including Mexico, Chile and Peru, are also struggling to contain major outbreaks.

With new confirmed cases in the US plateauing and many European countries reporting declining numbers, is Latin America the new epicenter of the pandemic?

The first confirmed case in Latin America was identified in Brazil on 26 February, although researcher­s have said there are indication­s that there were cases there as early as January.

Coronaviru­s has since spread to every country in the region.

More than 750,000 cases have been recorded, and more than 40,000 people have died, according to the European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention.

This is far fewer cases and deaths than in Europe and the US, but testing is nowhere near as widespread and deaths may be under-reported.

Latin America's two most populous nations, Mexico and Brazil, have seen the highest number of deaths, more than 7,000 and 23,000 respective­ly.

And researcher­s say both could be significan­tly underrepor­ting deaths, with many cases going undiagnose­d.

Peru has reported the 12th highest number of cases in the world with more than 120,000 confirmed - which is more than China.

And Chile is reporting thousands of new coronaviru­s cases each day, with more than 700 people dead.

Ecuador has seen the most deaths per capita in the region - with around 19 per 100,000 people. Daily cases in Ecuador have been stabilizin­g, but this is not the trend in many other countries in the region.

Unlike in the US and most countries in Europe, many countries in Latin America are seeing their daily cases and deaths increase.

Looking at Brazil, Mexico and Peru compared to the worst hit countries in Europe in terms of deaths - the UK, Italy and France - you can see daily deaths are growing in Latin American nations as they drop elsewhere.

The number of deaths in Brazil, Mexico and Peru is doubling roughly every two to three weeks, as opposed to about every three months in the UK, four months in France, and six months in Italy.

Deaths in the US are doubling about every two months.

On 22 May, the World Health Organizati­on's emergencie­s director, Dr Mike Ryan, said: “In a sense, South America has become a new epicenter for the disease.”

This came as Latin America - including Central America and Mexico - surpassed the US and Europe in reported daily cases.

And experts say the peak of the epidemic in some Latin American countries is still some weeks away.

As daily cases continue to rise, there are concerns that healthcare systems could be overwhelme­d, as has already been the case in Ecuador.

Chile's healthcare system is “very close to the limit,” according to President Sebastián Piñera.

And Pilar Mazzetti, who is leading of the Peruvian government's coronaviru­s response, has said: “We’re in bad shape. This is war.” (BBC)

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