World

Time for Covid-19 reality check after 1 mil deaths this year: WHO

Pandemic not over, but can be brought to end, technical chief says

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 27 Aug 2022 2:00PM

Time for Covid-19 reality check after 1 mil deaths this year: WHO
World Health Organisation Covid-19 chief Maria Van Kerkhove says the Covid-19 death toll is all the more tragic given that we have the tools that can actually prevent these deaths. – AFP pic, August 27, 2022

GENEVA – The World Health Organisation’s Covid-19 chief said yesterday it is time for a reality check on the virus after the millionth death from the disease this year.

Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead for Covid-19, said the toll is “heartbreaking” because the tests, treatments, vaccines and public health measures to control the disease are all available.

“Given we’re in the third year of the pandemic, it’s all the more so tragic given that we have the tools that can actually prevent these deaths,” she told a live interaction on WHO’s social media channels.

“A lot of us have become numb to the numbers.

“We need a reality check. We really need to take stock of where we are. We should not be in a position with 14,000 or 15,000 people dying every week. We just shouldn’t.”

Van Kerkhove insists that the pandemic is not over, but it could be brought to an end while people continue to live their daily lives.

“We just need to put a little extra thought into that, of being a bit more careful,” she said.

“A lot of people are talking about living with Covid-19. But we need to live with this responsibly.

“A million deaths this year is not living with Covid-19. Having 15,000 deaths per week is not living with Covid-19 responsibly.”

Nearly 6.45 million deaths have been reported to WHO since the virus was first detected in China in late 2019.

More than 5.3 million new cases were reported to the United Nations health agency last week.

“These are huge numbers, and that’s an underestimate,” said Van Kerkhove, with home testing not being reflected in surveillance data.

“We do see this virus circulating really intensely around the world.

“The virus is not going away, unfortunately.” – AFP, August 27, 2022

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