WHO warns of third coronavirus wave in Europe
A 10-week decline in new infections across Europe has ended and a
new wave is inevitable if citizens and lawmakers do not remain
disciplined, the head of the WHO in Europe, Hans Kluge, told a news
briefing on Thursday.
Germany expects the Delta variant to account for up to 80% of
infections this month, meaning it could ease curbs on travel from
countries such as Portugal and Britain, where the variant dominates,
the German health minister said.
Britain is working with countries across the European Union to
encourage them to accept its fully vaccinated travellers, the
business minister said, as momentum builds for a fuller reopening of
travel from the United Kingdom.
CureVac vaccine records only 48% efficacy
CureVac said its COVID-19 vaccine was 48% effective in the final
analysis of its pivotal mass trial, only marginally better than the
47% reported two weeks ago.
The German biotech firm said efficacy, measured by preventing
symptomatic disease, was slightly better at 53% when excluding trial
participants older than 60, an age group that is by far the most
severely affected.
Indian drugmaker Zydus Cadila said it had applied for emergency use
approval of its three-dose vaccine that showed efficacy of 66.6% in
an interim study and could become the second home-grown shot if
regulators consent.
Russia's COVID-19 cases surge
Health clinics in Moscow will begin offering booster vaccine shots
on Thursday, the city's mayor said, as Russian officials scramble to
contain a surge in cases blamed on the Delta variant.
The health ministry issued new regulations for the national
inoculation programme on Wednesday, recommending that clinics begin
administering booster doses to those vaccinated six months ago or
more, making Russia one of the first countries globally to begin
re-vaccination.
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Indonesia to bring in emergency
measures
President Joko Widodo said Indonesia would bring
in emergency measures until July 20, aiming to
contain an exponential spike in cases that has
strained the medical system.
The world's fourth most populous nation has seen
a near vertical climb in infections in recent
weeks, prompting health experts to warn that
without tighter measures its outbreak could be
as bad as India's devastating second wave.
Japan likely to extend curbs in Tokyo
Japan is likely to extend by two weeks or more
its virus containment measures in the greater
Tokyo area, four government sources said, as
infections creep up less than a month before the
Summer Olympics start.
Japan's capital and three neighbouring
prefectures are among areas under a 'quasi'
state of emergency set to run through July 11,
but a recent uptick in infections has officials
leaning towards keeping curbs in place.
Thailand's Phuket reopens to tourists
Hundreds of vaccinated foreign tourists arrived
on the Thai resort island of Phuket, the first
visitors to its beaches and golf courses under a
pilot programme devised to revive a tourism
industry pulverised by the pandemic.
The "Phuket sandbox" plan frees vaccinated
foreign tourists from spending any time in
quarantine, letting them travel round the island
freely.
(Compiled by Linda Noakes; Editing by Clarence
Fernandez)
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