Covid 19 news from around the world – The pandemic continues
You’d be forgiven for feeling the pandemic is on its way out, with restrictions mostly lifted and residents of the UK left to decide for themselves how many, if any, precautions they take. In some ways we’re getting an early taste of what it’ll be like living with covid. In other ways our country is taking a risk no other nation is prepared to take, going it alone while others continue to impose restrictions. Here are some facts about the current situation in the UK.
Covid facts – August 2021
- Experts are warning that the UK is 'running hot' around managing covid, as infection rates remain uncomfortably high. In England alone the infection prevalence is about 25 times higher than it was at this time last year. The number of cases is currently rising in all four nations. Northern Ireland is the worst, with 1 in 55 people estimated to have had covid in the first week in August. In England it’s 1 in 75 of us
- Some scientists suggest covid deaths and hospital admissions may fall in August. But while vaccines are cutting back hospital admissions and deaths, high case numbers are still putting an ‘unnecessary burden’ on the NHS
- Most regions in England could see admissions falling while London and the South East might have a small increase. In England deaths are expected to remain low but scientists say modelling can’t predict the future and the situation could easily worsen when the schools go back in September
- While the expected big spike in UK cases hasn’t happened yet, it remains a serious risk and nobody knows why it hasn’t happened yet
- In Ireland children aged 12 to 15 will be vaccinated – the drive has already begun
- In the UK as a whole we fall 27th out of the top 30 ‘partially vaccinated’ countries, with 69.6% of us fully vaccinated. In other words, we’re no longer doing very well, and we’re falling behind
- Hull has the highest covid rate in England at almost 600 infections per 100,000 people
- At the moment the highest infection rates in the world are found in the UK, Iran, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Spain, Malaysia and Botswana
- The UK is deploying the army, and not just to handle the current Brexit-fuelled transport difficulties. Health services in England are becoming so overwhelmed that the military has been drafted in to help ambulance staff in some regions
How about the rest of the world? International covid news
We live in a world that’s closely connected, which means the things that happen elsewhere will ultimately affect the UK. So what’s going on out there?
- France’s mandatory vaccine pass is working – ‘grumpy’ people who have so far refused vaccinations are finally turning up for their jabs
- In the USA hospitals have started to reach full capacity thanks to covid cases. The worst affected are Alabama, Hawaii, Oregon, Utah, and Tennessee
- The USA is struggling to cope with vaccine ‘hesitancy’ and vaccine misinformation. In Tennessee there are some particularly crazy lies being spread involving sinister ‘quarantine camps’, National Guard round-ups, permanent lockdowns, and livestock being vaccinated to trick hesitant meat eaters into being inoculated via their food. These are all untrue
- One Australian state has confirmed they’ll be handing out stiff on-the-spot fines for people who break the lockdown rules or tell fibs to contact tracers. New South Wales is facing its ‘worst situation... since day one’, with local infections surging by a record-breaking 466 in just 24 hours
- In Serbia, a hermit who has lived in an isolated cave for 20 years has come down from the mountains for his jabs. He says he doesn’t understand vaccine hesitancy
- Iran has just locked down again amid its 5th wave
- Russia has just confirmed its worst ever covid day with 819 deaths. Moscow’s July mortality rate was 60% higher than July 2020
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