WHO: Europe seeing resurgence of COVID-19
The World Health Organization (WHO)’s repeated warning of a possible resurgence of COVID-19 in the European region has now become a reality, Hans Kluge, WHO Regional Director for Europe, said Thursday.
“Last week, Europe saw an increase in weekly cases for the first time in months,” Kluge said at a press conference here.
Read alsoEU “determined” to protect its external borders, says EU foreign policy chief
The WHO official noted that 30 countries in the region had seen increases in new cumulative cases over the past two weeks, and “in 11 of these countries, the accelerated transmission has led to a very significant resurgence.”
Poland, Germany, and Spain recently saw a resurgence of COVID-19 clusters at schools, coal mines, and food production facilities, according to Kluge.
Despite commending these countries for their “controlled, rapid and targeted interventions,” he warned that health systems are being brought to “the brink once again in Europe.”
Read alsoUK PM says 2-meter social distancing rule to be cut to “1 meter plus”
However, Kluge saw a light of hope in the messages he received from health ministers in Europe that more and more people were being socially responsible and “adhering to physical distancing and wearing facial masks.”
Moreover, Kluge urged authorities in the region to use digital tools wisely while building trust by respecting privacy and addressing the digital gap.
“The full potential of digital health is yet to be realized. It is about empowering people to make healthy lifestyle decisions to create a European culture of health,” he said.
please make a donation here
Hot news
Top Hungary news: Serbia partners with Paks, Christmas market prices, prison for commenting, traffic changes, HUF 50,000 coin – 19 November, 2024
Orbán cabinet: Relations between Hungary and the UK to further strengthen
Hungarian Foreign Minister Szijjártó: More people in Europe becoming reasonable about illegal migration
This Hungarian word has become known and used worldwide!
Contemporary Chinese art on display at Hungarian National Museum
Hungarian policy makers leave base rate on hold at 6.50pc