Yuma Sun

WHO: COVID cases and deaths continue to fall globally

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GENEVA – The number of coronaviru­s cases reported globally has dropped for a second consecutiv­e week and confirmed COVID-19 deaths also fell last week, according to a World Health Organizati­on report issued Wednesday.

In its latest pandemic report, WHO said 9 million cases were reported, a 16% weekly decline, and more than 26,000 new deaths from COVID-19. The U.N. health agency said confirmed coronaviru­s infections were down in all regions of the world.

However, it warned that the reported numbers carry considerab­le uncertaint­y because many countries have stopped widespread testing for the coronaviru­s, meaning that many cases are likely going undetected.

WHO said it was also tracking an omicron variant that is a recombinat­ion of two versions: BA.1 and BA.2, which was first detected in Britain in January. WHO said early estimates suggest the recombined omicron could be about 10% more transmissi­ble than previous mutations, but further evidence is needed.

The agency has continued to warn countries not to drop their COVID-19 protocols too quickly and predicted that future variants could spread easily if surveillan­ce and testing systems are shelved.

Last week, the U.K. said COVID-19 had hit record levels across the country, with government statistics estimating that about 1 in 13 people were infected. Those figures came on the same day the British government abandoned its free testing program.

Meanwhile, Chinese authoritie­s conducted more mass testing this week across Shanghai, which remains in lockdown following another jump in infections; the city has recorded more than 90,000 cases but no deaths during the pandemic.

Despite growing public frustratio­n and concerns about economic effects, China says it is sticking to its hard-line “zero-tolerance” approach mandating lockdowns, mass testing and the compulsory isolation of all suspected cases and close contacts. Following a public uproar, Shanghai authoritie­s said Wednesday they would allow at least some parents to stay with children infected with COVID-19, making an exception to a policy of isolating anyone who tests positive.

 ?? ANDY WONG/AP ?? A WOMAN PULLS UP HER MASK to get her throat swab at a coronaviru­s testing site near residentia­l buildings Wednesday in Beijing.
ANDY WONG/AP A WOMAN PULLS UP HER MASK to get her throat swab at a coronaviru­s testing site near residentia­l buildings Wednesday in Beijing.

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