COVID cases in Asia surpass 100 million - Reuters tally
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[March 30, 2022]
By Rittik Biswas and Roshan Abraham
(Reuters) - Coronavirus infections in Asia
passed 100 million on Wednesday, according to a Reuters tally, as the
region records a resurgence in cases, dominated by the BA.2 Omicron
sub-variant.
The region is reporting over 1 million new COVID-19 cases about every
two days, according to a Reuters analysis. With more than half of the
world's population, Asia contributes 21% of all reported COVID-19 cases.
The highly contagious but less deadly BA.2 sub-variant of Omicron has
pushed the figures to greater highs in recent weeks in countries such as
South Korea, China and Vietnam. BA.2 now represents nearly 86% of all
sequenced cases, according to the World Health Organization.
South Korea leads the world in the daily average number of new cases
reported, accounting for one in every four infections reported globally
each day, as per Reuters analysis.
While the number of cases has levelled off since earlier in March, the
country is still reporting over 300 deaths on average each day, with
authorities ordering crematoriums nationwide to operate longer.
China is trying to tame its worst outbreak since the pandemic began. The
rise in COVID cases in Shanghai, fuelled by the BA.2 substrain, has
prompted the financial hub to go into lockdown. The city moved into a
two-staged lockdown of its 26 million residents on Monday, restricting
movement through bridges and highways to contain the spread.
China has reported over 45,000 new cases since the start of this year, a
figure higher than it reported in all of 2021. Even though China has
inoculated 90% of its population, not enough elderly people have
received booster doses, making them susceptible to reinfections.
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A man reacts as a health worker collects a swab sample during a
rapid antigen testing campaign for coronavirus disease (COVID-19),
at a railway station in Mumbai, India, January 13, 2022.
REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas/File Photo
Though China is sticking to its plan
for crushing the outbreak, experts overseas remain sceptical about
the efficacy of lockdowns in the face of the highly infectious
Omicron variant.
"It is clear from Australia and elsewhere in the
world that lockdowns are simply not effective against Omicron – so
expect a big wave coming," said Adrian Esterman, an expert in
biostatistics at the University of South Australia.
India alone accounts for 43 million COVID cases, more than the total
in the next three worst-hit Asian countries of Japan, South Korea
and Vietnam.
India has reported fewer than 2,000 cases per day for the past 11
days versus its peak this year in January of over 300,000 cases on
average per day.
Earlier in March, Asia passed 1 million COVID-related deaths. There
have now been 1,027,586 million COVID-related deaths across the
continent.
Vaccines are considered less effective against the BA.2 subvariant
compared to its predecessors. Studies have shown Omicron can
reinfect people previously diagnosed with different coronavirus
variants.
(Reporting by Rittik Biswas and Roshan Abraham in Bengaluru; Editing
by Karishma Singh)
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