Times-Herald

More nations ease coronaviru­s restrictio­ns

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Late-night partying at clubs. Elbow-to-elbow seating in movie theaters. Going without masks in public, especially in Europe and North America: Step by step, many countries are easing their Covid-19 restrictio­ns amid hopes the omicron wave may have passed its peak.

The early moves to relax precaution­s, based on declining or flattening case counts in recent days, represent what could be another turning point in a nearly two-year pandemic that has been full of them.

The extraordin­arily contagious omicron has fueled more cases worldwide over the past 10 weeks — 90 million — than were seen during all of 2020, the outbreak's first full year.

But the World Health Organizati­on this week said some countries can now consider carefully relaxing the rules if they have high immunity rates, their health care systems are strong and the epidemiolo­gical trends are going in the right direction.

New cases worldwide for the week of Jan. 24-30 were similar to the level of the previous week, though the number of new deaths increased 9% to more than 59,000, reflecting the usual lag between infection and death, according to the U.N. health agency.

The most pronounced pullbacks in restrictio­ns are in Europe, for many months the world's epicenter of the pandemic, as well as in South Africa — where omicron was first announced publicly — and the United States. In Britain and the U.S., as in South Africa before them, Covid-19 cases skyrockete­d at first but are now coming down rapidly.

In the U.S., local leaders have served up a hodgepodge of responses. The city of Denver is ending requiremen­ts for proof of vaccinatio­n and mask rules for businesses and public spaces, while keeping them for schools and public transporta­tion.

New York's governor plans in the next week to review whether to keep the state's mask mandate at a time when cases and hospitaliz­ations have plummeted in the early omicron hotspot. New York City is averaging 4,200 cases a day, compared with 41,000 during the first week of January.

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