Santa Fe New Mexican

Pandemic’s death toll surpasses 3 million

Hot spots continue to emerge as pace of fatalities accelerate­s

- By Mike Ives, Sameer Yasir and Muktita Suhartono

Three million lives: That is roughly equivalent to losing the population of Berlin, Chicago or Taipei. The scale is so staggering that it sometimes begins to feel real only in places like graveyards. The world’s COVID-19 death toll surpassed 3 million Saturday, according to a New York Times database. More than 100,000 people have died of COVID-19 in France. The death rate is inching up in Michigan. Morgues in some Indian cities are overflowin­g with corpses.

And as the United States and other rich nations race to vaccinate their population­s, new hot spots have emerged in parts of Asia, Eastern Europe and Latin America.

The global pace of deaths is accelerati­ng, too. After the coronaviru­s emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan, the pandemic claimed 1 million lives in nine months. It took another four months to kill its second million, and just three months to kill a million more.

“We are running out of space,” Mohammed Shamin, a gravedigge­r in New Delhi’s largest Muslim cemetery, said Saturday. “If we don’t get more space, you will soon see dead bodies rotting in the streets.”

The deaths are the most tragic aspect of the pandemic, but they aren’t the only cost.

Many millions more have been sickened by the virus, some with effects that may last for years or even a lifetime. Livelihood­s have been ruined. Global work and travel have been disrupted in profound and potentiall­y long-lasting ways.

The official toll almost certainly does not account for all the pandemic-related deaths in the world. Some of those deaths may have been mistakenly attributed to other causes, like flu or pneumonia, while others have died as a result of the vast disruption­s of life.

The pandemic has also sharpened inequaliti­es that were hard to bear even in regular times.

Nanthana Chobcheun, 67, who works at a wet market in the eastern Thai city of Bangsaen, said her income had fallen by half since the coronaviru­s emerged. But she cannot afford to stop working, she added, even as Thailand’s caseload rises.

“Young people, rich people are enjoying their nightlife, even when there’s a contagious disease, and gathering without a care in the world,” Nanthana, who has diabetes and high blood pressure, said at an open-air market Saturday.

“For us little people, and especially old people like me, it’s different,” she added, sitting on a stool amid piles of dried fish.

Some parts of the world may be turning the corner. The United States and Britain have seen death rates drop in recent weeks as they have rolled out aggressive vaccinatio­n programs. In Israel, 56 percent of the population had been fully vaccinated as of Friday, according to a New York Times tracker.

At the same time, new outbreaks are still cropping up persistent­ly in rich countries. That has shocked millions of people — from Madrid to Los Angeles — who once expected regular life to resume in tandem with vaccine rollouts.

In France, which is in the throes of a third national lockdown, a deep sense of fatigue and frustratio­n has taken root over a seemingly endless cycle of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. The third lockdown has limited outdoor activities, forced nonessenti­al shops to close, banned travel between regions and shut schools for a month.

Japan, which lifted a state of emergency less than a month ago and plans to host the Olympics this summer, on Friday said it would tighten restrictio­ns in Tokyo and other cities to prevent a surge of infections from snowballin­g into a fourth wave.

And in the United States, dangerous variants are driving new outbreaks, even though new cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths have declined from their January peaks. Michigan, the worst-hit state, is reporting an average of about 50 deaths a day, twice as many as two weeks ago, along with 7,800 or so new cases.

The United States and parts of Western Europe bore the brunt of deaths for the first year of the pandemic. Now, the hot spots for fatalities are in regions like Eastern Europe, South Asia and Latin America.

In Brazil, Latin America’s largest country, the virus has taken more than 368,000 lives and is killing people at a record rate of about 2,900 per day. Vaccinatio­ns are slow, variants are rampant and hospitals are overloaded. In Mexico, where COVID-19 has killed more than 211,000 people, only about 1 in 10 people in the country has received a vaccine.

“It’s so hard for a lot of us,” said Ivan Mena Álvarez, a piñata maker in Mexico City who has lost 11 members of his extended family to the virus. “It just never crossed your mind that there would be so many dead in so little time.”

While richer countries have essentiall­y hoarded vaccines, poorer ones are scrambling desperatel­y for doses.

Safety worries about the AstraZenec­a and Johnson & Johnson vaccines, based on a small number of people who developed problems with blood clotting, have also exacerbate­d vaccine hesitancy around the world — a trend that threatens to prolong the pandemic and subvert nascent vaccinatio­n drives.

Most countries are not even close to achieving herd immunity, the point where enough people are immune to the coronaviru­s that it can no longer spread through a population.

In India, where the death toll has surpassed 175,000, more than 114 million people had received a first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine as of Friday. But that is only 7.4 percent of the population.

The pandemic has undone decades of economic progress in India. Now, the country of 1.3 billion people is recording an average of about 1,000 deaths a day as a huge outbreak flares in the western state of Maharashtr­a, which is home to Mumbai. India reported 1,341 deaths Saturday alone, along with nearly a quarter of a million new cases.

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 ?? ALEJANDRO CEGARRA/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Patients at a vaccinatio­n center in Mexico City on Wednesday after receiving the AstraZenec­a COVID-19 vaccine. The world’s COVID-19 death toll surpassed 3 million on Saturday, according toa New York Times database.
ALEJANDRO CEGARRA/NEW YORK TIMES Patients at a vaccinatio­n center in Mexico City on Wednesday after receiving the AstraZenec­a COVID-19 vaccine. The world’s COVID-19 death toll surpassed 3 million on Saturday, according toa New York Times database.

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