COVID-19 cases and deaths declined globally in the last one week, according to the latest figures from the World Health Organisation (WHO),
According to ‘COVID-19 Weekly Epidemiological Update, Africa reported 108,000 cases and about 4,600 deaths, 27 per cent decrease in cases and eight per cent decline in deaths compared to the previous week.
The report, based on WHO data, showed that as of January 31, 2021, cases decreased for two consecutive weeks. South Africa reported 44,397 new cases, 74.9 new cases per 100,000 population and 44 per cent decrease, Nigeria (9,955 new cases, 4.8 new cases per 100 000, 15 per cent decrease) and Zambia (8,760 new cases, 47.7 new cases per 100,000 or three per cent increase).
However, South Africa also reported the highest number of new deaths in the last one week with 3,377 casualties, 5.7 deaths per 100,000 or nine per cent decrease followed by Zimbabwe with 219 deaths, 1.5 deaths per 100,000 or 25 per cent decrease and Malawi with 217 deaths, 1.1 new deaths per 100 000 or 28 per cent decrease.
WHO stated that globally, 3.7 million new cases were reported last week, a 13 per cent decline compared to the previous week and the third consecutive week showing a decline in cases.
There were 96,000 new deaths and a one per cent decline compared to the previous week, bringing the number of cases to over 102 million and the total number of deaths to 2.2 million in 222 countries and territories.
Last week, all WHO regions, except South-East Asia, reported a fall in new cases and although new deaths declined globally by one per cent, they rose in the Western Pacific by 21 per cent, Eastern Mediterranean (nine per cent) and America (four per cent).
Saturday, January 30, 2021, marked one year since WHO declared COVID-19 a Public Health Emergency of International Concern following 9, 826 cases in 20 countries and 213 deaths in China.