Corona virus infection is increasing in Italy. Nearly 143,000 new infections were detected on Tuesday — the most in this pandemic wave. The death toll from Covid-19 has also increased. World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warns that the “Covid-19 pandemic is far from over.”
Nearly 143,000 infections Corona virus The last day we were diagnosed Italy The country’s health ministry said on Tuesday. This is the largest number in this wave of infections, which has not been recorded in Italy since late January. 157 people have died, the most since April.
550,000 tests were done in one day – 26 percent of them were positive. Currently, many tests are done in March during the previous wave of epidemics. Queues form in front of pharmacies for repeated tests.
The number of infections in prisons is on the rise
According to official reports, more than 1.3 million people are currently infected in Italy. Hospitals have about 10,000 Covid-19 patients, including 375 in intensive care.
In just one week, the number of infected inmates in prisons has quadrupled, from 160 to more than 600, the prison service said.
“The virus is still spreading freely”
Director General of the World Health Organization (WHO). Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus He stressed on Tuesday that the “Covid-19 pandemic is not over and far from over”. He called on national governments to re-enforce some pandemic restrictions.
As coronavirus infections and hospitalizations rise, governments should implement tried-and-tested measures such as wearing masks, improved ventilation and test-and-treat protocols, the boss said. WHO.
In turn, WHO crisis chief Michael Ryan emphasized that the number of Covid-19 cases worldwide has increased by 30 percent. In the last two weeks, this increase is mainly due to the Omicron BA.4 and BA.5 sub-options.
He highlighted the rise of health measures to protect hygiene and social distancing, and the decline of screening, which complicates epidemic surveillance.
“The virus continues to spread freely and governments are not effectively distributing the burden of the disease to the best of their ability, with acute hospitalizations or a growing number of Covid-survivors, often referred to as the “Covid Long,” Tedros added. .
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