WHO has called for a protective device to be provided to frontline medical personnel to prevent it from being inflated with the new coronavirus and to spread it to their patients and families.
“About 14 per cent of COVID cases reported to WHO internationally are among fitness staff and in some countries this may be as high as 35 per cent,” said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. However, he added that knowledge was limited and that it was difficult to know whether other people were inflamed by paintings or in their communities.
The World Health Organization’s leading emergency expert, who was asked about the contradictory comments of President Donald Trump and US fitness officials. But it’s not the first time On COVID-19, he said it is vital that all countries have a “coherent message” for their audiences.
Trump on Wednesday made an exception to comments made through the director of the U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Robert Redfield, who said a vaccine could be widely implemented until mid-2021 and that mask could be more effective.
Trump, at a press conference, said the idea that a vaccine would be in position much earlier, said he called Redfield after his testimony to question him about this matter, and that Redfield gave the impression that he had gone through the consultation.
International passengers arriving at Abu Dhabi airport will now be required to wear a tracking device while serving a mandatory 14-day home quarantine due to COVID-19, according to Etihad Airways.
Daily infections in the United Arab Emirates increased this month to their peak since the outbreak began, which officials have largely blamed on others who do not practice social estgnation.
People arriving at Abu Dhabi airport are said to be equipped with a medically approved bracelet, which is removed after the 14-day home quarantine, according to the latest Etihad update.
The Philippines is contemplating allowing more nurses and other fitness professionals to paint the paintings after banning them from traveling so they can fight the coronavirus at home, said President Rodrigo Duterte’s spokesman.
Health care in the Philippines is at the front line of the pandemic in hospitals in the United States, Europe, and the Middle East and at home.
The Minister of Labour proposed extending the exemptions to those who had contracts until 31 August, but so far only those who have contracts are allowed to travel from 8 March.
Belarus plans to conduct a trial with another hundred people of the Russian COVID-19 vaccine, the Ministry of Health said, adding that potential participants can now apply online at 8 local clinics that have decided to conduct the trial.
The trial, one of many that Russia hopes to conduct abroad, is still awaiting regulatory approval, the ministry said, adding that it had won documents from Russia and in the process of examining it.
Large-scale trials of the Sputnik-V vaccine, such as Phase III trials, are underway in Russia with at least 40,000 people. The first effects are expected in October or November, said Kirill Dmitriev, director of the Russian Direct Investment Fund (DRIF).
The Philippine Ministry of Health reported 3,375 new coronavirus infections and 53 more deaths.
In a bulletin, the ministry said the total number of cases shown in the Philippines had reached 276,289, the peak in Southeast Asia, while the number of deaths had increased to 4,785.
The global economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic crisis can take up to five years, World Bank chief economist Carmen Reinhart said.
“There will be a rapid uptick as all closure-like restrictions will be lifted, but a full recovery will take up to five years,” Reinhart said in a remote speech at a convention in Madrid.
Reinhart said the pandemic recession will last longer in some countries than in others and exacerbate inequality, as the poorest will be more affected by the crisis in poorer countries and countries than other countries. Poverty rates will rise after the crisis, he added.
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) has warned that the new coronavirus is a source of discrimination against Asian communities, adding migrants and foreigners.
The humanitarian firm interviewed another 5,000 people in Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar and Pakistan and found that part was guilty of the spread of coronavirus to an express group, many of whom raised Chinese, immigrants and foreigners.
“It is a specific fear that domestic and foreign migrant personnel will be blamed for the spread of COVID-19 because they are already vulnerable,” dr. Viviane Fluck, one of the agency’s leading researchers and commitment and duty coordinator for Asia. Pacific Community Reuters News Agency.
He said more emphasis should be placed on combating “the rumors of underlying force dynamics and structural disorders of inequality. “
The death toll in Russia from the new coronavirus has exceeded 19,000, and the country has reported further deaths in the last 24 hours.
The country’s coronavirus crisis reaction center has recorded 5,762 new cases, bringing its national infection total to 1085281, the fourth largest number of cases in the world.
Norwegian Hurtigruten has cancelled its remaining cruises this year due to a build-up of COVID-19 cases in Europe and America, the company said.
The resolution concerns so-called Hurtigruten shipping cruises, which carry passengers to Arctic or Antarctic waters, although their freight and other activity will continue between ports on the Norwegian coast.
The company was the first cruise operator in the world to re-commission an ocean cruise in mid-June, with reduced passenger capacity, social distance and strict hygiene standards.
Britain faces difficulties in wearing down COVID-19 tests due to lack of laboratory capacity, Junior Health Minister Edward Argar said.
“The lab’s ability is one of the bottlenecks, or one of the most demanding situations to develop this capability,” Argar told Sky News.
Britain can establish new local restrictions and some other national blockade by respecting regulations such as not meeting in teams of more than six people, the minister added.
The Czech Republic has reported more than 2,000 new cases of COVID-19 on a non-marriage day for the first time, while fighting infection buildup among the fastest in Europe.
The Ministry of Health recorded 2139 cases of the new coronavirus on Wednesday, at an earlier record of 1675 reported the previous day.
Ukraine set a record with 3,584 new coronavirus infections, the National Security Council said, up from 3,144 on September 11.
Ukraine has a total of 166,244 cases, with 3,400 deaths and 73,913 recoveries, the council added.
Hello, it is Umut Uras in Doha who succeeds my colleague Kate Mayberry.
Almost part of others in 4 Asian countries – Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar and Pakistan – accuse some teams of spreading COVID-19, adding foreigners, others attending devout ceremonies and those who do not respect regulations on problems such as dressing in clothes. mask or physical distance.
More and more airlines besieged in Asia-Pacific are providing “flights nowhere” as the pandemic involves travel, according to reuters news agency.
Qantas is the newest to sign up for the trend as it offers a seven-hour flight over the australian interior and the Great Barrier Reef, which sold out in 10 minutes despite an initial value of A$787 (US$575). EVA Airways from Taiwan and ANA from Japan also featured special tour flights.
Strict border restrictions to keep coronavirus under control have caused a 97. 5% drop in foreigners to the region, according to the Asia Pacific Airline Association.
The UN’s most sensible humanitarian official said the coronavirus could be much more widespread in Syria than official figures suggest.
Mark Lowcock told the UN Security Council in New York on Wednesday that a clearer picture of the scenario can only be achieved when testing intensifies. a known source, suggesting widespread network transmission.
Syria has shown 3618 viruses.
India has reported another record increase in coronavirus cases confirming 97894 cases in the last 24 hours, according to the Ministry of Health.
Deaths, which have so far been low, are also on the rise. The country has recorded more than 1,000 deaths consistent with the day in the last two weeks.
London Fashion Week is expected to begin later on Thursday with an exhibition of the British luxury Burberry logo.
The exhibition will be broadcast at 12:00 GMT with Riccardo Tisci, its Italian designer, promising an uninhabited wild display in collaboration with the German artist Anne Imhof, who has been described as a “radical encounter of fashion and art”.
Around 80 designers will provide their newest collections at the six-day event, but only a handful will level out the kind of physical exhibits that, in the pre-COVID era, attracted hordes of industry experts, celebrities and broadcasters from around the world.
Malaysia’s Top Glove is expected to report record earnings later on Thursday, thanks to increased sales due to coronavirus.
Analysts expect the company, the world’s largest manufacturer of rubber and nitrile gloves, to report a profit of at least one billion Malaysian ringgit ($241 million) during the 3 months ended August 31, its fourth fiscal quarter.
Top Glove enjoys higher costs and increased demand due to coronavirus, however, it has also been criticized for its remedy for migrant workers. Customs imposed a ban on imports of its products in July due to problems of forced labour.
Crowds of up to 40,000 people will soon attend primary sporting events in Sydney after the New South Wales government announced a reduction in coronavirus restrictions.
The new regulations, which allow stadiums to be filled to 50% of their capacity, will take effect on 1 October when the National Rugby League and rugby championship end their season.
Stadium Australia, the arena built for the 2000 Olympics, will hold 40,000 spectators, the new Western Sydney Stadium at Parramatta 15,000 and the Sydney Cricket Ground 23,000.
Fans will have to wear a mask to enter the stadiums, but they will have to take them off inside, where they will be sitting in “checkered” arrangements to allow physical distance, the New South Wales government said.
New studies show that holders of transitional visas in Australia have suffered increasingly racist abuse after being excluded from government economic systems and Prime Minister Scott Morrison said it was time to go home.
In a survey of more than 6,000 transitional visa holders, a quarter reported racist abuse and a quarter said others have moved away from them because of their appearance.
“More than 1,600 participants described being attacked with xeonphobic insults, treated as if they were inflamed with COVID because they looked Asian or harassed for being dressed in a mask,” said Professor Bassina Farbenblum, an associate professor at UNSW Law, who worked on the with Laurie Berg, UTS’s adjunct law professor. Both are co-directors of the Migrant Workers Justice Initiative. “Many reported that, due to their Asian appearance, they were beaten, beaten, kicked, pushed, intentionally spat or coughed through passers-by on the street and on public transport. “
More than a million others live in Australia on transitional visas, adding foreign academics, backpackers and refugees. The survey found that 70% of respondents had lost all or most of their paintings due to the pandemic, with one in 3 foreign academics waiting for their budget to run out next month.
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro appointed an ecological fitness general as the country’s new fitness minister.
General Eduardo Pazuello won this position on a transitional basis four months ago, but now it will be permanent. He was more willing to adhere to Bolsonaro’s pandemic technique than his predecessors, adding that he recommended that doctors prescribe hydroxycoloroquine to treat COVID-19. there is no evidence of its effectiveness.
Bolsonaro, who tossed the virus as a “little flu,” flaked a drug box while Pazuello swore in Brasilia.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has said the number of others allowed to enter Australia will increase until 2000 from next Friday, according to public broadcaster ABC.
States, which will have to space arrivals from quarantined hotels, have yet to consent.
Approximately another 4,000 people can enter Australia each week, but at least 25,000 are stranded due to the arrivals limit. Many Australians also say they have been ejected from return flights on several occasions.
New Zealand has just published economic knowledge for the time being of the quarter, when the country crashed, and that’s not pretty.
Figures show that gross domestic product fell by 12. 2% in the last quarter, the biggest drop recorded. The country has lately been at its worst recession since 2010.
US President Donald Trump contradicted Robert Redfield, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), on the timing of any coronavirus vaccine.
While Redfield told a U. S. Senate committee that a vaccine probably wouldn’t be available until mid-to-late 2021, Trump said it would be much faster and accused the CDC leader of making a “mistake” and being “confused. “the press convention that a vaccine could be announced in early October.
Trump lobbied for a vaccine before the November election, which raised safety concerns. 3 human trials designed to test efficacy and safety.
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Hello and welcome to Al Jazeera ongoing on the coronavirus pandemic. I’m Kate Mayberry in Kuala Lumpur.
Read all updates from (September 16) here.