Global COVID-19 Deaths Top 3M; India, Brazil Struggle With Soaring Infections.
The global death toll from COVID-19 topped 3 million Saturday, according to Johns Hopkins University researchers, as nations around the world struggled if worsening surges in recent cases.
Pandemic-related deaths surpassed the grim milestone in an update issued by the university's disease trackers at around 5:30 A.M. EDT, three months after the COVID-19 death toll topped the 2 million mark.
The 3 millionth death came just hours after the head of the World Health Organization warned that infections were approaching their highest rates since the start of the pandemic.
"Around the world, cases and deaths are continuing to increase at worrying rates," WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said during a briefing Friday.
"Globally, the number of recent cases per week has nearly doubled over the past two months," he said. "This is approaching the highest rate of infection that we have seen so far during the pandemic."
One such country is India, which on Friday recorded 235,000 recent cases — by far a single-day record marking the highest point so far in a steep surge that began last month.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday urged the curtailment of the Kumbh Mela, the Hindu religious festival, and pilgrimage in which millions of devotees gather on the banks of the Ganges River every 12 years for ritual baths and other ceremonies.
The spike in COVID-19 cases has raised fears that the Kumbi Mela could serve as a "super-spreader" event, prompting Modi to urge in a tweet at Hindus to observe the holy day "symbolically" rather than through physical gatherings.
Nearly 86,000 recent cases and 3,300 deaths were reported on Friday in Brazil, where health officials warned women to delay getting pregnant until the pandemic eases.
"If it's possible, delaying pregnancy until a better moment should be considered, as happened in the Zika (virus case) in 2016," a health ministry official, Raphael Parente, told reporters during a Friday news conference.
Parente blamed the emergence of the Brazilian coronavirus variant as P1 for the warning, as it appears to affect expectant mothers more severely than the original strain.
"it's obvious that we can't say this to someone who is 42, 43 years old, but for a young woman who is more able to choose the moment of pregnancy, the most appropriate thing now is to wait a while until the situation becomes a little bit calmer," he said.







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