Rabu, 24 November 2021

UK boosted by third-jab success as infections surge in much of Europe - Financial Times

For much of the autumn, the UK was buffeted by the worst Covid-19 wave in western Europe.

But surges in coronavirus infections and hospital admissions on the continent in recent weeks, set against a fast-paced booster rollout in the UK, have prompted a change in fortunes.

Daily Covid-19 caseloads per 100,000 citizens in the UK now rank behind more than 10 European countries, including Belgium and Greece, while the UK’s daily rate of Covid-related fatalities per 100,000 is 40 per cent below the EU average, according to a Financial Times analysis of official data.

Although some western European countries currently have lower case rates than the UK, numbers have risen 30 per cent over the past week in Germany, 59 per cent in Spain and 83 per cent in France, compared with an 8 per cent rise in the UK.

Much of this can be put down to the successful UK booster jab campaign, while a combination of lower vaccine coverage, less infection-acquired immunity and later reopenings from lockdown has put much of Europe on a different trajectory, according to scientists and officials.

Chart showing that Covid cases and deaths are rising fast in much of Europe, rapidly outpacing the UK

Philippe Douste-Blazy, a former French health minister who now serves with the UN, told the Financial Times that the UK had “acted sensibly” by “turning [its] attention to boosters earlier than the rest of Europe”.

A booster uptake of nearly 80 per cent among eligible over-60s in the UK has led to an easing of hospital pressures in the past fortnight. Some 70 per cent of people who received their second dose at least six months ago in the UK have had a booster shot, compared with 52 per cent of eligible citizens in Germany and 43 per cent in Italy.

“The UK chose to have a long, broad peak, while much of Europe will have a small but very high peak” said Jeroen van der Hilst, associate professor of immunopathology at Hasselt university in Belgium.

“At some point, you have to face up to unvaccinated people getting infected and breakthrough infections . . . The UK was wise to do that during the relative calm of summer [as] we are only just doing it now.”

Mark Woolhouse, professor of infectious disease epidemiology at Edinburgh university, added: “In the UK, the Delta wave, problems with waning immunity and the onset of indoor mixing [over winter] happened separately.

“In countries like Austria, they’re occurring all at once and it’s creating the perfect storm.”

Chart showing that hospital admissions in England are falling much faster among the mostly-boosted elderly than among younger adults

UK primary vaccination rates are also ahead of some of Europe’s worst-affected countries. In the UK, just 13 per cent of over-12s have not received a first vaccine dose, while in Germany and Austria this figure is above 20 per cent.

However, John Edmunds, professor of infectious disease modelling at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, pointed out that the UK coronavirus strategy “has not been cost-free”.

Some 15,000 people have died from the virus since the UK emerged from lockdown in the early summer and more than 100,000 Covid-19 patients have been admitted to hospital.

Between mid-July and the start of the European wave in October, the UK recorded the fifth-highest per-capita death toll in the continent, although surging deaths in eastern Europe have since moved several other countries higher.

Countries such as Spain and Portugal, with higher vaccination coverage, low infection rates and mitigations such as mask-wearing still in place, were in a “far better position”, Edmunds added.

Woolhouse made the point that the UK “had an awful lot of natural exposure” as a result of the high level of infections since the summer, meaning that overall immune protection could be “among the highest” in Europe.

Viola Priesemann, a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization in Göttingen, said the contrast between the UK and Germany’s response could stem from a “different risk calculation”.

In Germany, daily Covid-19 cases are nearing the UK level, prompting a warning this week from Angela Merkel, outgoing chancellor, that current measures were “not sufficient”. In contrast, Boris Johnson, UK prime minister, insisted this week that there was “nothing in the data saying we need to move to Plan B”.

Chart showing that the UK’s high levels of infection-acquired immunity meant it entered winter with fewer people exposed to the virus than other European countries

“There are fundamentally different attitudes towards accepting hospital pressures,” said Priesemann.

Pascal Soriot, chief executive of AstraZeneca, noted this week that its coronavirus vaccine developed with Oxford university can help stave off serious Covid-19 illness in older people for longer, as he contrasted the lower hospitalisations in the UK than much of Europe.

However, Danny Altmann, professor of immunology at Imperial College London, said it “takes a brave person to put [the difference] down to one thing”.

Priesemann added that the UK “probably stands to gain more” from its booster campaign in large part because of the “more dramatic waning of immunity” associated with the Oxford/AstraZeneca jab.

Chart showing that The UK’s infection-acquired immunity cost thousands of deaths, but winter waves are now sending many other countries’ tolls even higher

Tim Spector, professor of genetic epidemiology at King’s College London, predicted that a “negligible amount” of triple-jabbed people would be admitted to hospital over winter.

Protection against symptomatic infection was 93.1 per cent for people aged 50 and above who originally received the AstraZeneca jab and 94 per cent for BioNTech/Pfizer recipients a fortnight after their Pfizer booster, according to the UK Health Security Agency.

“Taking [those with boosters] out of the equation will prove vital for health systems,” said Spector.

Nicola Low, an epidemiologist at Bern university and a member of the Swiss government’s coronavirus scientific task force, said overcoming the acute pandemic phase would take “an awful long time to occur . . . so, yes, third doses are going to be critical”.

She added: “Really, we should stop calling them boosters, and start calling them third doses, because it’s quite likely that a three-dose regimen is what you need to protect you.”

Chart showing that boosters are slowing the rise in cases among Belgium’s elderly, but in the Netherlands where boosters only began days ago, elderly rates are still surging

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2021-11-24 05:01:00Z
1155598669

UK boosted by third-jab success as infections surge in much of Europe - Financial Times

For much of the autumn, the UK was buffeted by the worst Covid-19 wave in western Europe.

But surges in coronavirus infections and hospital admissions on the continent in recent weeks, set against a fast-paced booster rollout in the UK, have prompted a change in fortunes.

Daily Covid-19 caseloads per 100,000 citizens in the UK now rank behind more than 10 European countries, including Belgium and Greece, while the UK’s daily rate of Covid-related fatalities per 100,000 is 40 per cent below the EU average, according to a Financial Times analysis of official data.

Although some western European countries currently have lower case rates than the UK, numbers have risen 30 per cent over the past week in Germany, 59 per cent in Spain and 83 per cent in France, compared with an 8 per cent rise in the UK.

Much of this can be put down to the successful UK booster jab campaign, while a combination of lower vaccine coverage, less infection-acquired immunity and later reopenings from lockdown has put much of Europe on a different trajectory, according to scientists and officials.

Chart showing that Covid cases and deaths are rising fast in much of Europe, rapidly outpacing the UK

Philippe Douste-Blazy, a former French health minister who now serves with the UN, told the Financial Times that the UK had “acted sensibly” by “turning [its] attention to boosters earlier than the rest of Europe”.

A booster uptake of nearly 80 per cent among eligible over-60s in the UK has led to an easing of hospital pressures in the past fortnight. Some 70 per cent of people who received their second dose at least six months ago in the UK have had a booster shot, compared with 52 per cent of eligible citizens in Germany and 43 per cent in Italy.

“The UK chose to have a long, broad peak, while much of Europe will have a small but very high peak” said Jeroen van der Hilst, associate professor of immunopathology at Hasselt university in Belgium.

“At some point, you have to face up to unvaccinated people getting infected and breakthrough infections . . . The UK was wise to do that during the relative calm of summer [as] we are only just doing it now.”

Mark Woolhouse, professor of infectious disease epidemiology at Edinburgh university, added: “In the UK, the Delta wave, problems with waning immunity and the onset of indoor mixing [over winter] happened separately.

“In countries like Austria, they’re occurring all at once and it’s creating the perfect storm.”

Chart showing that hospital admissions in England are falling much faster among the mostly-boosted elderly than among younger adults

UK primary vaccination rates are also ahead of some of Europe’s worst-affected countries. In the UK, just 13 per cent of over-12s have not received a first vaccine dose, while in Germany and Austria this figure is above 20 per cent.

However, John Edmunds, professor of infectious disease modelling at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, pointed out that the UK coronavirus strategy “has not been cost-free”.

Some 15,000 people have died from the virus since the UK emerged from lockdown in the early summer and more than 100,000 Covid-19 patients have been admitted to hospital.

Between mid-July and the start of the European wave in October, the UK recorded the fifth-highest per-capita death toll in the continent, although surging deaths in eastern Europe have since moved several other countries higher.

Countries such as Spain and Portugal, with higher vaccination coverage, low infection rates and mitigations such as mask-wearing still in place, were in a “far better position”, Edmunds added.

Woolhouse made the point that the UK “had an awful lot of natural exposure” as a result of the high level of infections since the summer, meaning that overall immune protection could be “among the highest” in Europe.

Viola Priesemann, a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization in Göttingen, said the contrast between the UK and Germany’s response could stem from a “different risk calculation”.

In Germany, daily Covid-19 cases are nearing the UK level, prompting a warning this week from Angela Merkel, outgoing chancellor, that current measures were “not sufficient”. In contrast, Boris Johnson, UK prime minister, insisted this week that there was “nothing in the data saying we need to move to Plan B”.

Chart showing that the UK’s high levels of infection-acquired immunity meant it entered winter with fewer people exposed to the virus than other European countries

“There are fundamentally different attitudes towards accepting hospital pressures,” said Priesemann.

Pascal Soriot, chief executive of AstraZeneca, noted this week that its coronavirus vaccine developed with Oxford university can help stave off serious Covid-19 illness in older people for longer, as he contrasted the lower hospitalisations in the UK than much of Europe.

However, Danny Altmann, professor of immunology at Imperial College London, said it “takes a brave person to put [the difference] down to one thing”.

Priesemann added that the UK “probably stands to gain more” from its booster campaign in large part because of the “more dramatic waning of immunity” associated with the Oxford/AstraZeneca jab.

Chart showing that The UK’s infection-acquired immunity cost thousands of deaths, but winter waves are now sending many other countries’ tolls even higher

Tim Spector, professor of genetic epidemiology at King’s College London, predicted that a “negligible amount” of triple-jabbed people would be admitted to hospital over winter.

Protection against symptomatic infection was 93.1 per cent for people aged 50 and above who originally received the AstraZeneca jab and 94 per cent for BioNTech/Pfizer recipients a fortnight after their Pfizer booster, according to the UK Health Security Agency.

“Taking [those with boosters] out of the equation will prove vital for health systems,” said Spector.

Nicola Low, an epidemiologist at Bern university and a member of the Swiss government’s coronavirus scientific task force, said overcoming the acute pandemic phase would take “an awful long time to occur . . . so, yes, third doses are going to be critical”.

She added: “Really, we should stop calling them boosters, and start calling them third doses, because it’s quite likely that a three-dose regimen is what you need to protect you.”

Chart showing that boosters are slowing the rise in cases among Belgium’s elderly, but in the Netherlands where boosters only began days ago, elderly rates are still surging

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2021-11-24 05:00:33Z
1155598669

Fully vaccinated travellers finally able to enter New Zealand from next year without quarantine - Sky News

Analysis by Sharon Marris, news reporter and New Zealander in the UK

New Zealand has been praised by experts around the world for its tough stance on COVID-19 - it locked down tough and early when the seriousness of the virus became known last year.

But when it closed its international borders, it locked many thousands of overseas-based Kiwis out of their own country.

In recent months, entry for citizens (and a very narrow group of exceptions) has been largely limited by the number of spaces in hotel isolation (Managed Isolation and Quarantine). Getting a space currently means entering a lottery, where tens of thousands of New Zealanders fight for what is usually between 3,000 and 4,000 spots.

It is possible to get an emergency space but the bar is set extremely high - New Zealanders have been stranded overseas with expired visas, some have missed saying goodbye to dying relatives, and a growing number are struggling with the mental effects of what it means to be effectively shut out of one's country.

Today's announcement will be met with a huge amount of relief but there will also be frustration that the changes are still so far away.

For months, the number of cases detected among returning New Zealanders has been in single figures - with pre-departure tests and some flights also now requiring vaccination, most of the risk is eliminated before boarding the plane.

The number of cases being picked up among returning New Zealanders is far outstripped by those emerging daily in Auckland.

New Zealanders who travel or live overseas have always felt safe in the knowledge that our passports mean we can go home if things turn sour. And we're lucky that home is one of the safest and most beautiful places in the world.

New Zealand's border policies during the pandemic, have shattered that. New Zealanders overseas will welcome the changes, but I don't think many of us will ever look at our passports in the same way again.

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2021-11-24 03:27:00Z
1177913254

Selasa, 23 November 2021

Bulgaria bus crash: Survivors broke window to flee inferno that killed 46 - BBC News

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The survivors of a bus inferno that killed at least 46 people scrambled to safety through a window after the vehicle caught fire and crashed in Bulgaria, officials say.

Seven people escaped with burns from the vehicle, which was packed with tourists who were mostly Macedonian.

The bus slammed into a barrier and went up in flames while returning from Istanbul in Turkey to North Macedonia.

Twelve children were among the dead, including twin boys, aged four.

Only four men and three women survived the disaster, which happened on a motorway south-west of the Bulgarian capital, Sofia, early on Tuesday.

The scale of the loss has caused shock and grief in Bulgaria and North Macedonia, where three days of national mourning have been declared.

Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev described the crash as "horrifying".

"I met the injured in a hospital in Bulgaria. My heart broke when I was hearing the cry of a father who lost [his] child," Mr Zaev told the BBC.

The PM said he had spoken to one of the survivors, who told him that passengers were asleep when the sound of an explosion woke them.

"They succeeded in breaking one of the windows and saved a few people. Unfortunately, the rest did not succeed," Mr Zaev told reporters.

The cause of the disaster was not immediately clear. Bulgarian officials said the bus swerved off the motorway and tore away a 50m (164ft) section of the crash barrier.

But it is not yet known if the bus caught fire before or after the crash. No other vehicles were involved in the accident.

An investigator takes a picture of the wreckage of a bus with North Macedonian plates that caught fire on a highway
EPA

Pictures of the aftermath showed a section of the road where the crash barrier had been shorn off and the charred bus, gutted by the fire.

The mayor of the nearby village of Pernik said the motorway was in poor condition on that section and there were often accidents in the area.

The bus had been returning to the capital of North Macedonia, Skopje, from a weekend holiday trip to Istanbul.

It was apparently travelling as part of a convoy of four buses and had stopped at a petrol station near Sofia about an hour before the accident. The other buses, which were a few minutes ahead, returned to North Macedonia safely.

line

A painful loss of life for Macedonians

Saska Cvetkovska for BBC News in Skopje, North Macedonia

On social media and elsewhere, reactions to this tragedy have been similar: this should not have happened.

Too many people die in road accidents every year in North Macedonia.

In February 2019, 15 people were killed and more than 30 were badly injured when a bus carrying workers to the Macedonian capital crashed.

The accident gained a lot of political attention and the government led by Prime Minister Zoran Zaev promised to review the way transport firms were licensed. When the news of Tuesday's accident broke, many Macedonians expressed outrage and disappointment.

Many feel those promises to keep people safe on the roads haven't been kept. Nikola Atanasovski lost a cousin in the 2019 bus crash.

"This morning, all I could think was, 'of course this has happened again'. But it should not. I feel angry," he told me.

In 2019, many people blamed the authorities. This feels different though.

In a country where so many people see their future abroad, it's particularly painful to lose so many young lives.

Macedonians feel they cannot afford to lose any life. Today, we lost nearly 50 people.

line

The victims have not yet been officially named, but officials said they included 12 children, and many young people aged between 20 and 30.

One man told the Sloboden Pecat newspaper that 10 of his relatives had died in the disaster.

"I lost my whole family in the blaze," the man was quoted as saying.

Five pupils at a primary school in Skopje and a young couple who were due to be married were also among the dead, Macedonian media said.

Macedonian reports said 27-year old Gazmend Ukali and Albina Beluli, 23, from the north-western town of Tetovo, had gone to Istanbul to celebrate Ukali's birthday.

Albania's foreign minister indicated that most, if not all, the passengers were ethnic Albanians from North Macedonia.

Relatives of passengers injured in the crash gather outside the hospital in Sofia
Reuters

Adnan Yasharovski said his 16-year-old daughter Zuleikha called him to say she had survived the crash. Mr Yasharovski told Reuters news agency he went to Sofia to see her in hospital.

"She was crying. Her hands were burnt but otherwise fine," he said, outside the hospital. "She didn't say much, she was crying and she was in shock."

The bus belonged to Besa Trans, a travel company that organises trips in Europe.

Within hours of the crash, relatives of people who travelled to Turkey with Besa Trans last week gathered outside the firm's office in Skopje, anxiously looking for information.

Bulgaria's interim Prime Minister Stefan Yanev described the incident as "an enormous tragedy".

"Let's hope we learn lessons from this tragic incident and we can prevent such incidents in the future," he told reporters as he visited the crash site.

Investigative service chief Borislav Sarafov said "human error by the driver or a technical malfunction are the two initial versions for the accident".

Mr Sarafov told reporters that it appeared both drivers had been killed in the crash so no one was able to open the doors.

Map of Bulgaria showing the site of the crash.
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2021-11-23 19:52:54Z
1177980734

Bulgaria bus crash: Children among at least 46 killed - BBC News

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At least 46 people, including 12 children, died when a bus crashed and caught fire in western Bulgaria, officials say.

The bus was registered in North Macedonia and most of those on board were tourists returning from a trip to Istanbul in Turkey.

It rammed a crash barrier on a motorway south-west of the capital Sofia at about 02:00 local time (00:00 GMT).

Seven people escaped from the bus and were taken to hospital with burns.

Four-year-old twin boys were among those killed in the crash.

Bulgarian Interior Minister Boyko Rashkov visited the "terrifying scene" and said the survivors had been badly burned.

The cause of the disaster was not immediately clear. Bulgarian officials described how the bus swerved off the motorway and tore away a 50m (164ft) section of the crash barrier, but it was unclear if that was before or after it caught fire.

Pictures of the aftermath showed a section of the road where the barrier had been shorn off. No other vehicles were involved in the accident.

The mayor of the nearby village of Pernik said the motorway was in poor condition on that section and there were often accidents in the area.

Macedonian Foreign Minister Bujar Osmani told reporters the coach party had been returning to the capital Skopje from a weekend holiday trip to Istanbul.

Bulgarian media said the bus had been travelling as part of a convoy of four buses and had stopped off at a petrol station near Sofia about an hour before the accident. The other buses, which were a few minutes ahead, returned to North Macedonia safely.

An investigator takes a picture of the wreckage of a bus with North Macedonian plates that caught fire on a highway
EPA

The victims have not yet been officially named, but officials said they included 12 children, and many young people aged between 20 and 30.

A young couple who were due to be married were among those killed. Macedonian reports said 27-year old Gazmend Ukali and Albina Beluli, 23, from the north-western town of Tetovo, had gone to Istanbul to celebrate Ukali's birthday.

Albania's foreign minister indicated that most, if not all, the passengers were ethnic Albanians from North Macedonia.

Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said he had spoken to one of the survivors, who told him that passengers were asleep when the sound of an explosion woke them.

"He and the other six survivors broke the windows of the bus and managed to escape and save themselves," Mr Zaev told reporters.

The bus belonged to Besa Trans, a travel company that organises trips in Europe.

Within hours of the crash, relatives of people who travelled to Turkey with Besa Trans last week gathered outside the firm's office in Skopje, anxiously looking for information.

Dzelal Bakiu told reporters in the Macedonian capital he was concerned for his nephew and had not heard from him since learning of the crash. He tried to contact the travel agency but had not been able to get any information.

Bulgaria's interim Prime Minister Stefan Yanev described the incident as "an enormous tragedy".

"Let's hope we learn lessons from this tragic incident and we can prevent such incidents in the future," he told reporters as he visited the crash site.

Investigative service chief Borislav Sarafov said "human error by the driver or a technical malfunction are the two initial versions for the accident".

The area around the site of Tuesday's incident on the Struma motorway was sealed off and footage from the scene showed the charred vehicle, gutted by the fire.

Mr Sarafov told reporters that it appeared both drivers had been killed in the crash so no-one was able to open the doors.

Map of Bulgaria showing the site of the crash.
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2021-11-23 15:02:50Z
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US to release 50m barrels of oil from reserves - Financial Times

President Joe Biden has announced the release of oil from the US’s strategic stockpile in an attempt to drive down petrol prices and snuff out a crude market rally that the White House has said poses a threat to the global economic recovery.

The White House said on Tuesday that the president was authorising the release of 50m barrels of oil — about 2.5 days worth of US oil consumption — “over the coming months”, in a move co-ordinated with China, India, Japan, South Korea and the UK.

But an effort to drive down oil prices that have doubled in the past year appeared to backfire, as international crude benchmark Brent rose more than 2 per cent on the news, to trade at about $81.40 a barrel on Tuesday morning in London.

Biden linked the release to efforts to beat back sharply rising inflation, saying Americans were “feeling the impact of elevated gas prices at the pump and in their home heating bills, and American businesses are, too, because oil supply has not kept up with demand as the global economy emerges from the pandemic”.

The decision comes weeks after a US government official told the Financial Times that an oil release was being considered. Saudi Arabia, Russia and other members of the Opec+ group of oil exporters have rebuffed repeated US pleas to increase supply.

Oil prices rose on the news, as traders calculated that the total volume to be released would be less than expected, and that Opec+ could retaliate by holding back more oil than planned. Opec did not respond to requests for comment.

Line chart of West Texas Intermediate ($/barrel) showing US oil prices have climbed as the world emerges from the pandemic

The release is the largest release of crude oil from the US’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve — an emergency stockpile created in the wake of the 1970s oil crises — since the civil war in Libya caused a rise in crude prices in 2011.

Analysts said it was unlikely to have the impact on prices Biden hoped it would and that it was a misuse of the emergency reserve.

“A co-ordinated raid of emergency stockpiles absent a geopolitical disruption — and intended to influence global oil prices — is a fateful energy policy precedent that is likely to backfire,” said Bob McNally, head of Rapidan Energy Group and a former adviser to the George W Bush White House.

The UK will release 1.5m barrels, and India will release 5m barrels. Volumes from other countries have not yet been confirmed.

The US will release 32m barrels “over the next several months” as part of an exchange allowing it to replenish the stocks later. The other 18m barrels to be released involve an accelerated sale of oil already authorised by Congress and expected by the market.

Biden is facing growing political pressure to tame petrol prices — up 60 per cent in the past 12 months — and other sources of high inflation, which have hit the approval ratings of both the president and other Democrats in Congress heading into next year’s midterm elections.

Senior administration officials said they had remained in contact with oil-producing countries in recent weeks, making clear that their “preference” was for them to take action, but also that they would “use the tools at the president’s disposal” to “respond to the current price and supply environment” without them.

The International Energy Agency, the oil-consuming nations’ watchdog that co-ordinated oil releases in the past, was not part of the White House’s announcement. Some members, including Germany, were opposed to an IEA-wide release, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The agency said it recognised that the rise in oil prices had placed a burden on consumers and added to inflationary pressures. “In this context, we respect the assessments and decisions made by individual IEA member and partner countries on how best to respond to the specific challenges and circumstances they each face,” it said.

One senior Biden official said: “Opec+ has said that they are planning to release an additional 400,000 barrels a day starting in December and our hope and expectation [is that] they will continue on that course.”

The American Petroleum Institute, a Washington oil lobby group, said any impact from the SPR release “is likely to be shortlived unless it is paired with policy measures that encourage the production of American energy resources”.

US oil production is down about 12 per cent compared with record highs set before the pandemic and has recovered slowly, even though crude prices have doubled in the past year.

Senior Biden administration officials also stressed that they were not just looking for oil prices to come down, but for that to be reflected in petrol prices. Biden last week called on the Federal Trade Commission, the US competition watchdog, to crack down on price gouging in the sector.

“We, of course, think it’s not just important for oil prices to fall, but prices to fall at the pump, which is why we’re also so focused on making sure that prices pass through quickly to consumers as they should,” said one senior administration official.

Additional reporting by Jim Pickard in London, Myles McCormick in New York and Amy Kazmin in New Delhi

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2021-11-23 15:16:44Z
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COVID-19: EU could pass two million coronavirus deaths mark by March 2022 - Sky News

The EU could surpass two million coronavirus deaths by next March if further action isn't taken to combat the virus, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has warned.

More protective measures are needed to "help avert unnecessary tragedy and loss of life", according to experts who fear the region is on course to pass another landmark number of deaths.

Europe is in the midst of a fourth virus wave, which has seen nations forced to re-introduce lockdowns and restrictions to help stem soaring case and death rates.

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Last week, reported deaths due to COVID-19 in the region increased to nearly 4,200 a day - doubling from 2,100 deaths a day during the end of September.

Meanwhile, cumulative deaths across Europe's 53 countries have passed the 1.5 million mark and the virus is now the leading cause of death, modelling by Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, has found.

"All of us have the opportunity and responsibility to help avert unnecessary tragedy and loss of life, and limit further disruption to society and businesses over this winter season," Dr Hans Henri Kluge, WHO regional director for Europe, said.

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According to the WHO, current calculations suggest there will be extreme stress on hospital beds in 25 countries, and high or extreme stress in intensive care units in 49 out of 53 countries between now and 1 March 2022.

Cumulative reported deaths are projected to reach over 2.2 million by spring next year, based on current trends.

On Monday, Austria began a 10-day national lockdown - the first European nation to re-enter lockdown since vaccines became widely available. It comes after cases shot up to 15,000 a day from a few hundred a day in the summer.

Germany and the Netherlands have been told they face tighter restrictions. The prospect of further curbs has prompted angry protests in some nations.

Dr Kulge, like other experts, is advocating for vaccinations, boosters, mask-wearing, social distancing and ventilation to be incorporated into people's everyday routines to help keep others safe and prevent further lockdowns.

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Riot police clash with COVID protesters in Belgium

Certain factors are driving the current virus wave on the continent.

Many countries are seeing a resurgence of coronavirus after relaxing restrictions, helped by the dominance of the more transmissible Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2, which is spreading faster now people are gathering indoors in the winter months.

Meanwhile, with a large number of unvaccinated people, and waning protection amongst those who haven't received booster jabs, many are left vulnerable to the virus.

More than one billion doses have been given in the WHO European Region, with 53.5% of people having completed their vaccine schedule.

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However, this hides wide differences between countries, where the range in completed vaccine dose series spans from under 10% to over 80% of the total population.

Dr Kluge added: "As we approach the end of 2021, let's do everything we can by getting vaccinated and taking personal protective measures, to avoid the last resort of lockdowns and school closures.

"We know through bitter experience that these have extensive economic consequences and a pervasive negative impact on mental health, facilitate interpersonal violence and are detrimental to children's well-being and learning."

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2021-11-23 14:48:15Z
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