Hospitalizations increase as COVID-19 cases in France reach a record high

PARIS (Reuters) – France on Friday recorded nearly 9,000 new instances of COVID-19, setting a record since the start of the pandemic, while others were also hospitalized due to the disease.

Health officials said there were 8,975 new cases shown, nearly 1,500 more than the last daily peak on 31 March 7,578, when France was in one of the maximum and strict blockages by coronavirus. Europe.

The outbreak in parts of France, partly due to the accumulation of evidence, forced the close of a dozen schools a few days after the start of the new school year.

The seven-day moving average of new infections, which solved the irregularities in the reports, an eighth consecutive record of 6011, against a low of 272 on May 27, two weeks after the government lifted the two-month blockade.

The cumulative number for now is 309,156.

With the buildup of infections basically affecting young people, who are less likely to increase complications, French hospitals have so far been less stressed, almost beaten in late March.

But after falling for months after a peak of 32,292 on April 14, the number of other people hospitalized increased 28 on Friday to 4,671, for the sixth consecutive day.

Among these, the number of others in intensive care (ICU) sets per COVID-1nine increased from nine to 473, well below the Record of April 8, 7,148, but expanded for the eighth consecutive day.

The number of others in France who allegedly died by COVID-19 30,686, 20 less than 24 hours earlier, as the government reviewed the number of deaths in nursing homes.

(Edited through Alexander Smith)

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