The World Health Organisation (WHO) is disturbed by the recent increase in global Covid-19 infections and infections coming at a time when countries across the world have since begun immunisation their populations against the pandemic, with over 780 million doses of vaccines having been administered to date.
Across the globe, more than 137 million people have contracted the coronavirus while over 2.95 million of them have since succumbed to it since late 2019 when Covid-19 broke out in China and later spread all over the world.
In Zimbabwe, where Covid-19 cases have of late been rising, over 37, 300 citizens have since been infected while over 1, 500 of them have since died of Covid-19 complications.
Briefing the media on the pandemic Monday, WHO director-general, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said infections and deaths have been increasing as opposed to January and February when they drastically fell.
โWe have now seen seven consecutive weeks of increasing cases, and four weeks of increasing deaths,โ bemoaned Ghebreyesus.
He said it was not yet time for the world to relax and be complacent, adding Covid-19 prevention measures should be religiously adhered to as they have proven that they are effective.
โPhysical distancing works,โ said the WHO chief.
โMasks work. Hand hygiene works. Ventilation works. Surveillance, testing, contact tracing, isolation, supportive quarantine and compassionate care โ all work to stop infections and save lives. But confusion, complacency and inconsistency in public health measures and their application are driving transmission and costing lives. It takes a consistent, coordinated and comprehensive approach.
Ghebreyesus said many countries around the world had shown that coronavirus could be stopped and contained with proven public health measures and strong systems that respond rapidly and consistently.
โAs a result, many of those countries have gained control over Covid-19, and their people are now able to enjoy sporting events, concerts, restaurants and seeing their family and friends safely,โ said Ghebreyesus.
โWHO does not want endless lockdowns. The countries that have done best have taken a tailored, measured, agile and evidence-based combination of measures. We too want to see societies and economies reopening, and travel and trade resuming. But right now, intensive care units in many countries are overflowing and people are dying โ and it is totally avoidable.โ
He added that it was unfortunate that in some countries, despite continuing transmission, restaurants and nightclubs were full, markets were open and crowded with few people taking precautions.
โSome people appear to be taking the approach that if they are relatively young, it doesnโt matter if they get Covid-19,โ he said.
โThis disease is not flu. Young, healthy people have died. And we still donโt fully understand the long-term consequences of infection for those who survive. Many people who have suffered even mild disease report long-term symptoms including fatigue, weakness, โbrain fogโ, dizziness, tremors, insomnia, depression, anxiety, joint pain, chest tightness and more, which are symptoms of long-Covid.โ