Global health officials back AstraZeneca vaccine
Health officials around the world gave their backing to the
AstraZeneca vaccine, after a study showing it had little effect
against mild disease caused by the variant now spreading quickly in
South Africa rang global alarm.
The prospect that new variants could evolve the ability to elude
vaccines is one of the main risks hanging over the global strategy
to emerge from the pandemic.
South Africa, where a new variant now accounts for the vast majority
of cases, initially announced a pause in its rollout of a million
doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine. But it said on Monday it could
still roll it out in a "stepped manner".
Fauci says quick vaccinations needed to slow variants
The best defence against emerging variants is getting as many people
vaccinated as quickly as possible, top U.S. infectious disease
doctor Anthony Fauci said on Monday.
Nearly 700 cases associated with variants have been identified in
the United States, U.S. officials said on a press call. Of them, 690
cases are from a more transmissible variant first discovered in the
United Kingdom, which could become the dominant variant in the
United States by March.
The United States has not been testing widely for variants, so the
actual number is likely higher than official figures.
New figures suggest Russia had third highest death toll
Russia's state statistics service on Monday reported 162,429 deaths
related to COVID-19 in Russia last year, a tally that is much higher
than previously reported and amounts to the world's third highest
death toll from the disease in 2020.
The figure is almost three times higher than the 57,555 deaths
attributed to COVID-19 in 2020 by Russia's coronavirus task force,
and confirms comments by a deputy prime minister last year
suggesting the toll was higher than reported.
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The data could renew questions
about how the death toll is calculated in Russia
and how effective Russia's handling of the
pandemic has been.
Iran starts vaccinations
Iran launched a vaccination drive on Tuesday,
focusing initially on hospital intensive care
personnel as the hardest-hit country in the
Middle East awaits enough vaccines for its
general population. State
television showed Parsa Namaki, son of Health Minister Saeed Namaki,
receiving the first jab, in an apparent effort by officials to boost
public confidence in Russia's Sputnik V vaccine.
Iran has received 10,000 of the 2 million doses of Sputnik V it has
ordered and plans to vaccinate some 1.3 million people by March 20.
Testing collapses in Myanmar after coup
Testing for coronavirus has collapsed in Myanmar after a military
coup prompted a campaign of civil disobedience led by doctors and
mass protests swept the country.
The number of daily tests reported late on Monday stood at 1,987,
the lowest number since Dec. 29, compared with more than 9,000 a
week earlier and an average of more than 17,000 a day in the week
before the Feb. 1 coup. Since the coup, tests per day have averaged
9,350.
Myanmar has suffered one of the worst outbreaks in Southeast Asia
with a total of 31,177 deaths from more than 141,000 cases.
(Compiled by Linda Noakes, editing by Ed Osmond)
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