PARIS (Reuters) – Daily COVID-19 infections in France reached their highest level in more than two months on Wednesday at 1695, and the seven-day moving average above the 1,300 threshold for the first time since April, when the country was still blocked. Out.
The daily average of 1,222 cases since early August is now almost 3 times higher than 435 June, but remains part of 2,585 cases in April, when the pandemic was in full swing.
France’s main beach resorts have made it mandatory to wear a mask on the streets and some have been limited to beaches as new cases have increased.
It is expected that the Government of Paris will soon announce that other people will have to wear a mask on the banks of the Seine and around the elegant Canal Saint-Martin, as well as in some of the other tourist spots of the capital.
However, after shooting in the last two days, the number of patients in extensive care facilities in French hospitals by COVID-19 was reduced to four, to 384.
And the total number of other people hospitalized for the disease fell from 14 to 5,148, following a downward trend of two and a half months and suggesting that the increase in cases has not yet resulted in a new strain on the fitness care system.
The number of other people in extensive care sets for the virus peaked at 7,148 on April 8 and the total number of hospitalizations peaked at 32,292 on April 14.
The French fitness government reported nine more deaths from the disease, bringing the total to 30,305, the seventh in the world. The number of instances displayed is 194,029.
Reporting through Benoit Van Overstraeten; Edited through Franklin Paul and Alison Williams
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