Pakistan reports uptick as Covid worldwide deaths down 95% this year
NIH data shows rise in daily infections and tests: Infectivity rate slides to 1.19%
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Pakistan has reported uptick in the Covid-19 infections as the World Health Organisation declared that coronavirus deaths had dropped by 95 percent since the start of the 2023.
Pakistan has taken in another 21 Covid infections with no fatality during the last 24 hours (Wednesday), showed the data released by the National Institute of Health (NIH) on Thursday morning.
According to the NIH data, the death toll in the country remained the same at 30,656 whereas the number of total infections now rose to 1,580,631 after adding the fresh 21 cases.
COVID-19 Statistics 27 April 2023
— NIH Pakistan (@NIH_Pakistan) April 27, 2023
Total Tests in Last 24 Hours: 1,768
Positive Cases: 21
Positivity %: 1.19%
Deaths: 00
Patients on Critical Care: 10
(shared by NCOC-NIH)
During the last 24 hours (Wednesday), 1,768 tests were conducted throughout Pakistan whereas the positivity ratio stood at 1.19%. The number of patients in critical care stood at 10.
Covid deaths down 95 percent this year
The WHO said Wednesday that Covid-19 deaths had dropped by 95 percent since the start of the year -- but warned the virus was still on the move.
The World Health Organization said Covid-19 was here to stay and countries would have to learn how to manage its ongoing non-emergency effects, including post-Covid-19 condition, or Long Covid.
"We're very encouraged by the sustained decline in reported deaths from Covid-19, which have dropped 95 percent since the beginning of this year," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a press conference.
"However, some countries are seeing increases, and over the past four weeks, 14,000 people lost their lives to this disease.
"And, as the emergence of the new XBB.1.16 variant illustrates, the virus is still changing, and is still capable of causing new waves of disease and death."
Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO's technical lead on Covid-19, said XBB sub-lineages were now dominant worldwide.
They have an increase in growth advantage and are also showing immune escape, meaning people can be reinfected despite having been vaccinated or previously infected.
She called for increased surveillance through testing "so that we can monitor the virus itself and understand what each of these mutations means".
That knowledge could feed into vaccine composition and inform decisions on handling the virus, she said.
Tedros reiterated that the WHO remained hopeful of declaring an end to Covid-19 as a public health emergency of international concern, with the committee that advises him on the status due to convene next month for its regular quarterly meeting.
"But this virus is here to stay, and all countries will need to learn to manage it alongside other infectious diseases," he added.
Tedros meanwhile said that an estimated one in 10 infections resulted in Long Covid, suggesting that hundreds of millions of people would need longer-term care.
The WHO chief also noted how the Covid-19 pandemic disrupted vaccination programmes, with an estimated 67 million children missing out on at least one essential jab between 2019 and 2021.
Following a decade of stalled progress, vaccination rates are back to where they were in 2008, he said, leading to rising outbreaks of measles, diphtheria, polio and yellow fever.
All countries must address "the barriers to immunisation, whether it's access, availability, cost or disinformation", he said.
With inputs from AFP.