WHO: World coronavirus cases fall 24%; deaths rise in Asia

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
New coronavirus cases reported globally dropped nearly a quarter in the last week while deaths fell 6% but were still higher in parts of
Asia, according to a report Thursday on the pandemic by the World Health Organization.The U.N
health agency said there were 5.4 million new COVID-19 cases reported last week, a decline of 24% from the previous week
Infections fell everywhere in the world, including by nearly 40% in Africa and Europe and by a third in the Middle East
COVID deaths rose in the Western Pacific and Southeast Asia by 31% and 12% respectively, but fell or remained stable everywhere else, AP
reported.At a press briefing Wednesday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said reported coronavirus deaths over the past month
have surged 35%, and noted there had been 15,000 deaths in the past week.15,000 deaths a week is completely unacceptable, when we have all
the tools to prevent infections and save lives,& Tedros said
He said the number of virus sequences shared every week has plummeted 90%, making it extremely difficult for scientists to monitor how
COVID-19 might be mutating.On Thursday, WHO&s vaccine advisory group recommended for the first time that people most vulnerable to COVID-19,
including older people, those with underlying health conditions and health workers, get a second booster shot
Numerous other health agencies and countries made the same recommendation months ago.The expert group also said it had evaluated data from
the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines for younger people and said children and teenagers were in the lowest priority group for
vaccination, since they are far less likely to get severe disease.Earlier this week, British authorities authorized an updated version of
Moderna&s COVID-19 vaccine that targets omicron and the U.K
government announced it would be offered to people over 50 beginning next month.The post WHO: World coronavirus cases fall 24%; deaths rise
in Asia first appeared on Ariana News.