London, France and Germany have been warned that they are at the breaking point of a momentary wave of COVID-19, as Europe faces the truth that the summer sun has driven away the nightmare.
On Tuesday, the French government issued a 10-point message from its clinical counseling organization calling the scenario “under control but fragile,” with a “very likely” wave of moment in the coming European autumn or winter.
“The long-term of the short-term epidemic is largely in the hands of French citizens, especially their ability to take on and respect all measures of social estrangement,” he said.
“A shallow wave” is already there, according to the German doctors’ union. Bloomberg
France has accumulated more than 1000 new cases in line with day-to-day life, and hospitalization rates are also expanding slightly.
Meanwhile, in Germany, the doctors’ union Marburger Bund told a German newspaper that “we are already on a shallow wave.”
“We all aspire to normality, but we are in a state that is not normal,” union president Susanna Johna said, warning of the possibility that Germany would simply “waste its past success” if other people didn’t wear masks, she kept a social report. distance and practiced. Hygiene taken care of.
The country’s official epidemiology center, the Robert Koch Institute, reported 879 new cases tuesday and described the incident as “worrying.” Johns Hopkins University counted 4999 new cases and 29 deaths last week, bringing the total number of deaths to 9156.
However, the country is well prepared: more than a portion of its extensive care beds are loose and 270 COVID-19 patients are in extensive care, 130 of them in fans.
Some Germans are fed up with the widespread epidemic. This weekend, another 17,000 people gathered for a dense march in Berlin to protest against restrictions on coronaviruses and the use of masks.
Coronavirus fatigue is also on the agenda, as easyJet announced that it would expand its summer program to meet the best-than-expected call on the continent.
The cheap airline now plans to operate at 40% of its capacity between July and September. “Customers have an underlying preference and disposition for e-books and travel,” said CHIEF executive Johan Lundgren.
World Health Organization special envoy for coronaviruses in Europe, David Nabarro, told the BBC on Tuesday that tracing and testing could slow the resurgence.
“This virus is able to recover very temporarily and is doing so in most countries where it has controlled it to control it,” he said.
If testing, tracking and isolation have gone well, “then the overloads remain very low, they are treated temporarily and life can pass.” But if you don’t, “you get really bad pushes and that will lead to economic challenges.”
It turns out that the wave is currently sweeping spain, where more than 8,500 new infections were recorded over the weekend.
The Spanish government will accentuate the search for contacts, but although it manages some of the localized epidemics, others appear.
The rate of occurrence in some of the local centers is more than one hundred instances consistent with one hundred,000 inhabitants, and at the maximum Aragon affected is 380 consistent with one hundred,000 last Friday.
Two other villages have been placed in two-week lockouts since the weekend, with another 10,000 people excluded from their homes unless necessary, after an outbreak at a slaughterhouse.
That said, the mortality rate has fallen to less than 10 deaths consistent with the week, and the scale is much higher than at the height of the crisis. Nearly two-thirds of cases are asymptomatic and less than 10% of newly detected infections end up in the hospital.
Tourists taking precautions in northwestern Spain. Ap
“We left the storm, but we haven’t reached a port yet,” Health Minister Salvador Illa told the newspaper El País.
In Britain, the government has issued regulations for police to enforce a semi-blocking of four million other people in and around Manchester.
Regulations save you any social combinations between families, outdoors or indoors, but to cushion the economic shock, families can still make a stopover in bars or restaurants.
Deaths in Britain have fallen below average in recent weeks, however, in some areas, the number of new infections has accelerated.
There is a noise of drums of fear as to whether schools will reopen in September. A study published in the medical journal The Lancet concluded that “the reopening (even partial) of schools and the return to the more general touches that accompany it are likely to lead to a momentary wave of infections, unless the tests are particularly intensified. “
British medical director Chris Whitty warned last month that other social media, such as pubs, must be closed to allow schools to reopen without causing a momentary wave.
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