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Global deaths from coronavirus surpass 6,000

The head of the World Health Organization says Europe had become the new epicenter of the pandemic after it peaked earlier in Asia.

  • By Scott Neuman/NPR
A Moscow metro depot employee disinfects a metro train in Moscow, Russia, Monday, March 16, 2020. Starting from early March, Moscow authorities have been sending people who traveled to countries most affected by the coronavirus epidemic and returned with flu-like symptoms to a new hospital on the outskirts of the city. For most people, the new coronavirus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia.

 Pavel Golovkin / AP Photo

A Moscow metro depot employee disinfects a metro train in Moscow, Russia, Monday, March 16, 2020. Starting from early March, Moscow authorities have been sending people who traveled to countries most affected by the coronavirus epidemic and returned with flu-like symptoms to a new hospital on the outskirts of the city. For most people, the new coronavirus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia.

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(Washington) — With the number of cases worldwide from the novel coronavirus surpassing 150,000 and some 6,000 deaths, governments across the globe continued their struggle to contain the pandemic — hoping to limit the number of new infections, while treating those individuals suffering from COVID-19 and isolating others whose symptoms are not as severe but who might spread the disease.

Here’s a snapshot by region of what is happening as of Monday morning:

Europe

The head of the World Health OrganizationTedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said over the weekend that Europe had become the new epicenter of the pandemic after it peaked earlier in Asia.

“More cases are now being reported [in Europe] every day than were reported in China at the height of its epidemic,” Tedros, the organization’s director, said at a news conference at the WHO’s Geneva headquarters.

Officials in Italy have reported some 3,600 new cases and 368 deaths in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of infections there to nearly 25,000 and some 1,800 deaths. Italy is second in the number of reported infections and deaths only to China, where the epidemic was first identified in December.

People stand on a balcony adorned with an Italian flag during one of the many flash mobs taking place these days in Rome, Sunday, March 15, 2020. The nationwide lockdown to slow coronavirus is still early days for much of Italy, but Italians are already showing signs of solidarity with flash mob calls circulating on social media for people to ''gather'' on their balconies at certain hours, either to play music or to give each other a round of applause. For most people, the new coronavirus causes only mild or moderate symptoms. For some, it can cause more severe illness, especially in older adults and people with existing health problems.

Alessandra Tarantino / AP Photo

People stand on a balcony adorned with an Italian flag during one of the many flash mobs taking place these days in Rome, Sunday, March 15, 2020. The nationwide lockdown to slow coronavirus is still early days for much of Italy, but Italians are already showing signs of solidarity with flash mob calls circulating on social media for people to ”gather” on their balconies at certain hours, either to play music or to give each other a round of applause. For most people, the new coronavirus causes only mild or moderate symptoms. For some, it can cause more severe illness, especially in older adults and people with existing health problems.

Italian officials have expressed concern that the surge in infections has pushed the country’s health system to the saturation point, according to NPR’s Sylvia Poggioli. Health authorities say there is a severe lack of intensive care unit beds, ventilators and protective masks to treat the huge influx.

“It’s not a wave, it’s a tsunami,” Dr. Robert Rona, who is in charge of intensive care at Monza hospital outside Milan, told The Associated Press.

The disease first appeared in Lombardy, the region that is home to Milan, a metropolis of 3 million people that is Italy’s economic powerhouse. It started in a cluster of small-to-medium-sized towns in the region and Poggioli reports that “everything is being done to prevent a surge in cases in Milan.”

Spain, where the government formally declared a state of emergency over the weekend, ordered a lock down — requiring people to stay home to foster social distancing and for all non-essential shops to close, along with restaurants, bars, cafes and movie theaters.

In Spain, the total number of confirmed infections now exceeds 7,800 cases, with 282 deaths.

Following a lengthy briefing on Saturday, Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, whose wife has tested positive for the virus, said “extraordinary” decisions were required to combat the disease.

“From now, we enter a new phase,” he said. “We won’t hesitate in doing what we need [to do] to beat the virus.”

“During the state of emergency, people will only be allowed out on to public streets for the following reasons: to buy food, basic or pharmaceutical items; to attend medical centers; to go to and from work; to look after children, older people or those with disabilities or who are especially vulnerable; and to attend financial or insurance offices on force majeure grounds,” Sánchez said, according to The Guardian newspaper.

In a gesture of gratitude for doctors, nurses and other medical workers who work in Spain’s national health system, people went to their balconies all over the country at 10 p.m. local time to applaud in unison.

In Francemunicipal elections went ahead as planned on Sunday under what officials said were tight sanitary restrictions, including “safe spacing” of voters as they queued and providing hand sanitizer. There have been nearly 5,500 total confirmed cases in France, with 127 deaths from COVID-19. Despite assurances that the polling was safe, the interior ministry on Sunday reported turnout was just 18.3%, down 5% from elections six years ago.

France has already ordered a lock down similar to the one Italy and Spain have imposed.

the agency said it was warning against large events and mass gatherings that include "conferences, festivals, parades, concerts, sporting events, weddings, and other types of assemblies."

Bernat Armangue / AP Photo

Spanish cartoonist Maria del Rosario “Chary” closes his stall after been told by local police to leave Mayor square in downtown Madrid, Spain, Sunday, March 15, 2020. Spain awoke to its first day of a nationwide quarantine on Sunday after the government declared a two-week state of emergency. The government imposed the special measures including the confinement of people to their homes unless shopping for food and medicine, going to and from work, and to meet other basic needs. The vast majority of people recover from the new coronavirus. According to the World Health Organization, most people recover in about two to six weeks, depending on the severity of the illness.

However, the government is expected to lay out emergency measures this week, including requiring people 70 years and older to self-isolate for as long as four months.

Last week, the government of Prime Minister Boris Johnson signaled that it might be considering a different approach to the rest of the world — in essence, allowing a large percentage of the population to become infected, creating a “herd immunity” that would eventually stamp out the epidemic.

But public backlash to that suggestion, which would result in tens of millions of Britons becoming infected with the virus, forced the government to backtrack.

“We will do the right thing at the right time, based on the best available science,” Health Secretary Matt Hancock wrote in an opinion piece that appeared in The Telegraph over the weekend. “Herd immunity is not our goal or policy, it’s a scientific concept.”

Nearly 4,000 cases and more than 700 deaths have been reported in Germany and some 1,400 infections and more than 230 deaths in Switzerland. Hundreds of cases and scores of deaths have been reported also in the NetherlandsSwedenNorwayDenmarkAustriaBelgium and Greece.

Asia

New cases in China, where the epidemic began, have been decreasing steadily in recent weeks, with just 27 new cases reported in the WHO’s latest situation report, which is updated every 24 hours. It is a long way from the peak of the crisis in China about a month ago, when Beijing reported more than 14,000 new infections in a single day. A total of about 81,000 cases have been reported there since December.

In recent days, the country has begun shifting its efforts from the internal spread of the virus to keeping new cases from abroad from entering.

The number of new cases is also in decline in South Korea and Japan — two countries that were hard hit as the infection spilled over from China in the early days of the epidemic. Seoul reported 76 new cases and Japan 64, according to WHO.

Although government officials have refrained from critiquing the rest of the world’s response to the pandemic, some hospital officials haven’t been as reticent.

Zhang Wenhong, director of the infectious diseases department at Shanghai Huashan Hospital affiliated with Fudan University, wrote on the hospital’s social media account: “We had thought the world would synchronise controls with those taken in China – in the way that Singapore, Japan and South Korea have done.”

“But Europe has become the new epicentre and brought us huge uncertainties,” he wrote, according to the South China Morning Post.

Indonesia, a country whose health minister last week said was free of coronavirus, attributing its good fortune to prayer, now reports nearly 120 cases and nearly 50 deaths.

A woman passes by South Korean army soldiers wearing protective gears as they stand to spray disinfectant as a precaution against the new coronavirus at a shopping street in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, March 4, 2020. The coronavirus epidemic shifted increasingly westward toward the Middle East, Europe and the United States on Tuesday, with governments taking emergency steps to ease shortages of masks and other supplies for front-line doctors and nurses.

Ahn Young-joon / AP Photo

A woman passes by South Korean army soldiers wearing protective gears as they stand to spray disinfectant as a precaution against the new coronavirus at a shopping street in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, March 4, 2020. The coronavirus epidemic shifted increasingly westward toward the Middle East, Europe and the United States on Tuesday, with governments taking emergency steps to ease shortages of masks and other supplies for front-line doctors and nurses.

Middle East

In Iran, where the epidemic has infected some 14,000 people by official accounts, a 78-year-old member of the clerical body that chooses the country’s supreme leader has reportedly died from COVID-19. The virus has killed some 700 people in Iran, but suspicions about the government’s assessment of the epidemic within its borders has led some to question the official statistics as understated.

Elsewhere in the region, Qatar has reported more than 300 cases and 75 deaths; Bahrain more than 200 with one reported death; and Kuwait says it has more than 100 confirmed cases with 12 deaths.

A number of cases have been reported in a dozen other countries in the Eastern Mediterranean.

Canada and Latin America

In Canada, where last week Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that he and his family would self-isolate after his wife Sophie Grégoire Trudeau tested positive for coronavirus, there have been nearly 250 cases, with 68 deaths.

Last week, the press secretary to Brazilian President Jair Bolsanaro tested positive for the virus after meeting President Trump at the Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida. More than 120 cases have been reported in Brazil according to the latest WHO report, with 23 deaths from the virus.

Africa

The continent of Africa, which faced the brunt of the 2014 Ebola outbreak, appears thus far to have been largely spared from COVID-19. According to the WHO, South Africa has had 38 cases, with 21 deaths from the virus, while Algeria has had 37 confirmed cases and Senegal 21, with each of those countries reporting 11 deaths.

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