Lodi News-Sentinel

Mexico tops 100K COVID-19 deaths; actual toll higher

- By Dale Quinn

Mexico became the fourth country in the world to pass the mark of 100,000 deaths from the novel coronaviru­s, with health authoritie­s acknowledg­ing that the toll is probably magnitudes higher.

With 576 new COVID-19 deaths reported late Thursday, some 100,104 Mexicans have succumbed to the respirator­y disease. The North American country added another 4,472 cases for a total of 1,019,543.

Mexico has been plagued by insufficie­nt testing throughout the pandemic, leading to a positivity rate that’s stood around 40% — among the highest in the world. President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador was slow to impose lockdowns and quick to lift restrictio­ns, saying Mexicans will know how to take care of themselves to prevent infection and spreading.

In late October, the government said that 193,170 more people had died through September compared with an average of recent years. While those excess deaths include people who died from other causes, an unknown portion of them had COVID and were never tested or died at home.

Deputy Health Minister Hugo Lopez Gatell, who’s running the country’s response to the pandemic, has repeatedly defended Mexico’s response to the illness, reiteratin­g that dealing with the pandemic requires a long-term strategy.

Lopez Obrador on Friday defended his government’s policies and criticized media coverage of the virus in Mexico.

“Our adversarie­s, from the beginning, wanted to use the misfortune of the Mexican people from this pandemic to blame us,” he said at his daily morning press conference. “They don’t take into account that we inherited a health system that was totally destroyed.”

Officials in Mexico also have to balance public health with a large vulnerable population that must work to meet basic needs, and the government did not roll out a large stimulus package to support them.

After shuttering some factories and businesses earlier in the year, much of Mexico’s economic activity is returning to normal despite recent outbreaks in states bordering the U.S. like Chihuahua, which has been posting record days for new infections.

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