Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Decline or stagnation in pandemic reported across country

- ZÜBEYDE YALÇIN

THE WORST may not be over yet, but Turkey is reporting an improvemen­t in its fight against the coronaviru­s outbreak after months of patient increases. Currently, all provinces are reporting a decline in cases or little change in upward trends, with the exception of the country’s most populated city, Istanbul. The public also appears to be acclimatin­g to the “new normal” where masks are mandatory, social distancing is enforced and strict hygiene rules are followed. Even the usually crowded marketplac­es have fewer customers nowadays. The decline in the number of patients is attributed to early measures Turkey took and its decision to gradually reopen rather than completely lift the lockdown in one instance. Turkey entered a normalizat­ion process in June with some businesses being allowed to reopen and curfews gradually being lifted for at-risk people. Though some age groups, particular­ly younger citizens, have had difficulty adapting to a “controlled social life,” the majority of the public sticks to the rules. Surveys show fewer people favor a return to curfews despite occasional fluctuatio­ns in the number of patients.

ANATOLIA and the central regions of Turkey had seen a boom in the number of patients, especially after residents of big cities in the west traveled to their hometowns for the summer holiday. The majority of those travelers returned to the west last month, leading to a decline in the number of patients in the region. Authoritie­s do not expect sudden COVID-19 surges in Anatolia as trips between cities have significan­tly decreased. A further drop is expected in the coming months.

Istanbul, however, remains at risk due to its citizens returning last month. Indeed, it is the only place where patient numbers are on the rise. Provinces in the vicinity of the metropolis are reporting stable numbers but authoritie­s expect a rise in Istanbul through mid-December. The capital Ankara, meanwhile, is experienci­ng a downward trend in its number of patients after reporting surges in the past few months.

Turkey registered 1,614 more COVID-19 patients and 1,301 recoveries over the past 24 hours, the Health Ministry said Monday. The country’s patient count to date stands at 337,147, with recoveries totaling 295,658, according to ministry data. Just over 115,600 coronaviru­s tests were carried out over the past 24 hours, raising the total above 11.7 million. The death toll from the virus reached 8,895, with 58 more deaths. The figures also showed that the number of patients in critical condition currently stands at 1,417, with 5.9% having developed pneumonia this week. The total number of critically ill patients reached 1,417 as of Monday, Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said in a tweet. “There is a drop in our intensive care occupancy rates this week. The rate of pneumonia in patients has also fallen compared to last week,” Koca said. He also stressed that when preventati­ve measures are applied conscienti­ously by everyone, the nation will see results. “We will succeed together, count on it,” he said.

FAMILY TOGETHERNE­SS

Still, the risk is here and it is highest for family members of infected patients. İhsan Ateş of Ankara City Hospital said it has been quite common to see at least two members of the same family hospitaliz­ed for the coronaviru­s. “We had a 104-year-old patient confined to bed for five months. Her grandson visited her for only 10 minutes, and she was infected from him,” Ateş told Anadolu Agency (AA) yesterday. “Every member of the family, be they young or old, should fully comply with measures,” he warned.

Ateş said that although the virus affects people of advanced age more, middle-aged people also suffer from its devastatin­g impact once infected. “Senior citizens are more fragile in terms of their metabolism and their existing diseases, which puts them in a deadly risk group. Yet middle-aged patients have a host of difficulti­es in recovery. Their bodies produce a more aggressive response to the virus. As a matter of fact, it is not the virus but this aggressive response that leads to fatalities in this age group,” he said.

 ??  ?? People wearing protective masks sit on benches in Kuğulu Park, in the capital Ankara, Turkey, Oct. 12, 2020.
People wearing protective masks sit on benches in Kuğulu Park, in the capital Ankara, Turkey, Oct. 12, 2020.

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