COVID cases down in Americas but Omicron subvariants driving new
infections -PAHO
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[July 14, 2022]
By Steven Grattan
(Reuters) -The Pan American Health
Organization (PAHO) on Wednesday warned of the growing number of
COVID-19 cases caused by the highly infectious BA.4 and BA.5 Omicron
subvariants of the coronavirus even as overall cases dipped in the
Americas.
There were 1,562,967 new COVID-19 cases in the Americas last week, a
0.9% decrease, PAHO said at a news conference, while deaths fell 3.5% to
4,789.
But PAHO Director Dr. Carissa Etienne cautioned that the Omicron
subvariants, now dominant in the United States and several other
countries, "is driving new infections across the Americas."
"The emergence of BA.4 and BA.5 is yet another reminder that the virus
keeps evolving every time it is transmitted, and that we must remain
vigilant," Etienne said.
She urged countries in the Americas to reintroduce public health
measures like the use of facemasks and social distancing when cases
spike.
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Healthcare workers register people to be tested for the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) as Peru raised its pandemic alert level in
various cities and tightened some restrictions due, to a third wave
of infections caused by the spread of the Omicron variant, in Lima,
Peru January 6, 2022. REUTERS/Angela Ponce/File Photo
"This virus knows no borders,
especially now that international travel has resumed. We must use
every tool at our disposal to protect ourselves, particularly those
of us most vulnerable to severe disease and death."
Compared to the previous week, COVID-19 cases increased by 2% in
South America and by 55% in Central America. Cases decreased 5.2% in
the Caribbean and 4.5% in North America.
COVID-19 related deaths jumped 14.2% in South America, while they
decreased in the remaining three subregions in the Americas, PAHO
said.
(Reporting by Steven Grattan in Mexico City; Editing by Bill
Berkrot)
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