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Coronavirus Infected 100,000 More People Worldwide In Less Than 2 Weeks

  • NPR
The rate of new coronavirus cases spreading into new regions from its epicenter in Asia is illustrated by a graph from the World Health Organization.

The rate of new coronavirus cases spreading into new regions from its epicenter in Asia is illustrated by a graph from the World Health Organization.

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The coronavirus that causes COVID-19 needed more than three months to infect 100,000 people worldwide, with most of them in China. But the virus has surged since hitting that milestone earlier this month, infecting another 100,000 people in just 12 days, the World Health Organization said on Friday.

The picture of the virus’s impact has changed markedly this month, according to the WHO’s most recent data.

For months, the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic was in China’s Hubei province. But the epicenter of new cases in now in Europe – and more people have now died from the viral respiratory disease in Italy than in China.

“Italy’s death toll is more than 3,400 as the country enters its 11th day in lockdown,” NPR’s Sylvia Poggioli reports from Rome. “A decline in new cases is not expected until the end of next week.”

Poggioli adds that 300 volunteer doctors are now being rushed to the Lombardy region, the heart of the outbreak in Italy, to give relief to overworked medical staff there.

The European region (87,108 confirmed cases) is now poised to supplant the Western Pacific Region (92,333 cases) as the area hardest-hit by COVID-19, the WHO said in its situation report that was published Friday morning.

The WHO also released a graphic showing the changing source of new coronavirus cases by region worldwide, highlighting spikes in cases in Europe and the Americas since late February.

The WHO figures reflect the most recent data as of late Thursday. As of Friday morning, there were 210,000 cases worldwide, according to the WHO. The situation is even worse when viewed through a COVID-19 dashboard created by the Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering, which reports coronavirus numbers in near realtime.

According to that tally, there are already nearly 250,000 cases worldwide — including 10,000 deaths from COVID-19. That dashboard also reports that 86,000 people have recovered from the disease.

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