Amid
COVID surge, WHO urges Europe to step up controls now to
save lives
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[October 15, 2020]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Imposing tighter
controls to curb COVID-19 contagion could save hundreds of thousands of
lives across Europe before February as the continent battles an
exponential surge in infections, the World Health Organization said on
Thursday.
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Urging governments to "step up" swiftly to contain in a second wave
of the coronavirus pandemic, the WHO's European director Hans Kluge
said the current situation was, "more than ever, pandemic times for
Europe".
New infections are hitting 100,000 daily in Europe, and the region
has just registered the highest weekly incidence of COVID-19 cases
since the beginning of the pandemic, with almost 700,000 cases
reported.
"The fall (autumn) and winter surge continues to unfold in Europe,
with exponential increases in daily cases and matching percentage
increases in daily deaths," Kluge told an online media briefing.
"It's time to step up. The message to governments is: don't hold
back with relatively small actions to avoid the painful damaging
actions we saw in the first round (in March and April)."
More than 38 million people globally have been reported as infected
with COVID-19, and 1.1 million have died.
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Kluge cited projections from what he described as "reliable epidemiological
models" and said they were "not optimistic" for the European region.
"These models indicate that prolonged relaxing policies could propel - by
January 2021 - daily mortality at levels 4 to 5 times higher than what we
recorded in April," he said.
But taking simple, swift tightening measures now - such as enforcing widespread
mask-wearing and controlling social gatherings in public or private spaces -
could save up to 281,000 lives by February across the 53 countries that make up
the WHO European region, he add.
"Under proportionately more stringent scenarios, the models are reliably much
more optimistic, he said, adding: "Pandemic times do not necessarily mean 'dark
times'."
(Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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