Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Countries across Europe set grim COVID-19 records

Government­s struggle to contain a European surge in coronaviru­s cases with only four countries measuring below the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control’s (ECDC) alarm threshold

- ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH WITH AGENCIES

EUROPEAN countries are again seeing a surge in infections amid the ongoing battle to contain outbreaks with only four countries measuring below a crucial level of COVID-19 cases, according to the latest figures released earlier this week.

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control’s ( ECDC) coronaviru­s alarm threshold is 20 cases per 100,000 people on a sevenday average. The agency found only Germany (18.4 cases per 100,000), Finland (15.5), Greek Cyprus (14.6) and Norway (13.9) fell below this case threshold.

Europe has recorded more than 235,000 deaths so far and is approachin­g a caseload of 6 million out of the more than 35.2 million cases officially diagnosed across the world. The World Health Organizati­on ( WHO) said Monday that figure is likely a fraction of the actual count, which the U.N. health body estimated at one in 10 of the world’s 7.8 billion people.

Poland yesterday reported a daily record of 3,003 new COVID-19 cases and also a record 75 deaths, as it imposes new restrictio­ns to try to dodge a full lockdown. Poland’s surge in infections is accompanie­d by a regional spike in cases, with the Czech Republic reporting 4,457 new cases yesterday – the fastest rise in Europe to date. The region initially managed to record fewer cases than Western Europe during

the first wave of the pandemic but has struggled to keep cases down in recent weeks as it seeks to avoid lockdowns and the associated economic fallout.

In Western Europe, Germany set a new record for the number of COVID-19 cases in a day, numbers higher than in the second half of April when case counts were then at their peak. The number of patients in intensive care and on ventilator­s is also up compared with a week ago, and the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), the national disease control agency, said yesterday that 2,828 more cases had been confirmed

in the last one-day period. At the height of the pandemic in late March and early April, Germany was counting more than 6,000 new cases per day before they fell off markedly. However, the numbers began trending upward again in July. The country has marked record high daily numbers for the period after the April peak several times in the last few weeks. The latest figures released showed a further 16 people died after catching the virus, bringing the death toll to 9,562.

In Brussels, the Belgian capital took a step toward restoring its COVID-19

lockdown yesterday, ordering cafes and bars to close for a month. Restaurant­s serving meals at tables will remain open, but bars and drinking alcohol in public places will be banned until Nov. 8, the regional government said. This is the second time Brussels has imposed such measures since the initial outbreak of the virus after a previous lockdown helped bring cases down. Nonetheles­s, new infections, as well as serious cases involving hospital admissions and regional authoritie­s, are tightening the rules again.

 ??  ?? A health care worker takes a blood sample from a patient at St Anne-St Remi Clinic, Brussels, Belgium, Oct. 6, 2020.
A health care worker takes a blood sample from a patient at St Anne-St Remi Clinic, Brussels, Belgium, Oct. 6, 2020.

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