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Several European countries lifted COVID measures too ‘brutally’: WHO

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A woman wearing a face mask to help protect against the spread of COVID-19 walks by a board showing members of South Korean K-Pop group BTS to advertise a local bank’s money exchange in Seoul, South Korea.
A woman wearing a face mask to help protect against the spread of COVID-19 walks by a board showing members of South Korean K-Pop group BTS to advertise a local bank’s money exchange in Seoul, South Korea.

SWITZERLAND, SOUTH KOREA: Several European countries, including Germany, France, Italy and Britain, lifted their COVID curbs too “brutally” and are now seeing a rise in cases likely due to the more transmissible BA2 variant, the World Health Organization said Tuesday.

WHO Europe Director Hans Kluge told a press conference in Moldova that he was “optimistic but vigilant” about the pandemic’s development in Europe.

COVID is on the rise in 18 out of 53 countries in the WHO European region, he said. “The countries where we see a particular increase are the United Kingdom, Ireland, Greece, Cyprus, France, Italy and Germany”. He said the main reason behind the increase was likely the BA2 variant, which is more transmissible, but not more dangerous than other variants.

Meanwhile, Health officials in South Korea have instructed crematoriums to burn more bodies per day and funeral homes to add more refrigerators to store the dead as families struggle with funeral arrangements amid a rise in COVID-19 deaths.

The country has been dealing with a massive coronavirus outbreak driven by the fast-moving omicron variant, which has compromised a once robust pandemic response and is driving up hospitalizations and fatalities.

Officials have already allowed the 60 crematoriums across country to burn for longer hours starting last week, which raised their combined capacity from around 1,000 to 1,400 cremations per day.

But that hasn’t been enough to meaningfully ease the backlog of bodies waiting to be cremated in the densely populated Seoul metropolitan area, which is home to half of South Korea’s 52 million people and the center of its COVID-19 outbreak. The backlog has also trickled down to funeral homes at hospitals and other facilities, where families have struggled to make funeral arrangements because of the longer wait for cremations.

Senior Health Ministry official Son Youngrae said during a briefing that officials will instruct regional crematoriums to increase furnace operations from five times to seven times a day, which would match the levels at crematories in the greater capital area.

crematoriums will also be asked to receive reservations from outside their regions — something many facilities don’t typically do — to reduce the backlog in the Seoul region, Son said.

The country’s 1,136 funeral homes at hospitals and other facilities are currently capable of housing some 8,700 bodies, and officials will ask them to increase their capacity by adding more refrigerators or rooms with cooling systems.

Nearly 2 million virus carriers with mild or moderate symptoms have been asked to isolate at home to save hospital space. – INDIAN EXPRESS,GULF TIMES

Thursday, March 24, 2022 – 01:00











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