China Daily Global Weekly

Latin America embraces return to normal

- By SERGIO HELD The writer is a freelance journalist for China Daily.

Countries across Latin America are opening up and returning to some semblance of normality as new COVID-19 cases and daily death tallies fall sharply.

There have been more than 56.6 million COVID-19 cases in Latin America over the past two years, but the recent numbers have been encouragin­g. On April 19, the region of 422 million people recorded 36,000 new infections and 243 deaths. Some countries, like Uruguay, have stopped reporting daily figures.

“In Argentina and Uruguay, the number of daily deaths due to COVID-19 has decreased a lot, thanks to vaccines. Recently in Argentina, it was the first time since the beginning of the pandemic that we had a complete day without a death,” said Flor Fasanella, a pharmacist who recently moved to Argentina from Uruguay and specialize­s in integrativ­e medicine.

Vaccines have played a key role in containing the pandemic, Fasanella said. Argentina uses six different vaccines, including two produced by China, Sinopharm and CanSino.

In Argentina, the use of face masks is no longer mandatory in schools or open spaces.

“We are, at the moment, (seeing) the lowest (hospital) bed occupancy from the pandemic. The … low contagion and increased vaccinatio­n give us the possibilit­y of taking a step forward in returning to life and to normality,” said Horacio Rodriguez, mayor of Buenos Aires, when he announced the relaxation of

pandemic measures in the Argentine capital.

Chile’s health ministry has revoked the requiremen­t for PCR tests and vaccinatio­ns for internatio­nal travelers arriving in the country.

“These results are largely due to the successful vaccinatio­n process and a long-standing vaccinatio­n culture and

vaccinatio­n infrastruc­ture that the country has had in place for several decades,” Sebastian Ugarte, director of the Critical Care Medicine Program at Andres Bello University in the Chilean capital Santiago, said.

The situation is similar in the northern part of Latin America. Colombia reported one COVID-19-related

death on April 20.

“In Cuba, the virus is under control. It is a topic that is no longer talked about in the daily lives of Cubans,” said Rene Duarte-Rodriguez, manager at Elegancia Suites, a hotel in Havana.

However, some experts said the relaxation of pandemic measures should be done with care in the Latin American region.

“It is somehow good that some rules are softened, but I think that you have to have the face mask in your pocket, very close to you,” said Di Pietranton­io, a medical doctor and epidemiolo­gy specialist from Buenos Aires.

Pietranton­io noted that in most places in Latin America, the third COVID-19 vaccine dose has been offered, and even a fourth dose is being offered to the most vulnerable.

As for Chinese vaccines, many of which are distribute­d across the region, Pietranton­io said China has achieved a production standard that has been the envy of the rest of the world. “China has shown in recent years that its labs have grown a lot in vaccine research, but also in the developmen­t of vaccines. Such is the case of Sinopharm’s vaccines, which have proven to be as effective as the rest of the vaccines,” he said.

 ?? CARL DE SOUZA / AFP ?? A young reveler watches a parade during the second night of Rio de Janeiro’s Carnival parade in Brazil on April 23.
CARL DE SOUZA / AFP A young reveler watches a parade during the second night of Rio de Janeiro’s Carnival parade in Brazil on April 23.

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