New Global Coronavirus Cases Nearly Double In 2 Months

Around the world, "covid-19 cases and deaths are continuing to increase at worrying rates," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at a briefing Friday.

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Covid cases around the globe has almost doubled over the past two months.

The number of new coronavirus cases around the globe has almost doubled over the past two months, an alarming increase that the World Health Organization said Friday was nearing the pandemic's peak infection rate.

Around the world, "covid-19 cases and deaths are continuing to increase at worrying rates," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at a briefing Friday.

"This is approaching the highest rate of infection that we have seen so far during the pandemic," he said. "Some countries that had previously avoided widespread covid-19 transmission are now seeing steep increases in infections."

Case numbers have spiked in nearly all regions, with larger outbreaks gripping Brazil, India, Poland, Turkey and some other countries. In the seven days ending April 11, global cases rose by 11 percent compared to the previous week, according to the WHO.

Some of those infections were due to the spread of new variants, while other surges came as pandemic fatigue set in and authorities moved to relax restrictions. The rise in cases comes as vaccines rollouts continue globally, with some countries hoping to counteract the surge with inoculations and others facing serious vaccine shortages that could make such efforts impossible.

Indian officials said Thursday that more than 200,000 new cases had been confirmed in the last 24 hours alone. The government has ordered temporary hospitals to be set up in hotels and banquet halls in order to cope with an onslaught of cases.

In Mumbai, authorities implemented a strict set of temporary rules this week, closing most businesses. The case count in India is significantly higher than it was during the country's last devastating surge in September. Many measures were relaxed last year as cases started to dwindle. But cases began to steadily increase earlier this year and the latest case levels are wreaking havoc on the country's health system.

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Home to 1.4 billion people, India is a crucial global supplier of vaccines but health workers in some parts of the country claim to now be facing a shortage at home. Thus far, more than 110 million doses have been administered in the country.

In Brazil, where more than 13.7 million cases have been confirmed since last year, doctors were urgently requesting supplies this week as they faced a shortage of sedatives critical to the intubation process for severely ill patients.

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More than 365,000 people have died after falling sick in Brazil, where a highly contagious variant is spreading quickly and overwhelming the health system. Doctors Without Borders has called the situation as a "humanitarian catastrophe," driven by what the organization described as the government's inadequate, politicized response to the crisis.

Turkey confirmed record single-day case numbers this week, with the number of new cases confirmed in a 24-hour period surpassing 60,000. On Wednesday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced new partial lockdown measures that coincide with the first weeks of the holy month of Ramadan.

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Meanwhile, Poland's health minister told a radio program Friday that the country is experiencing a "downward" trend in cases after reporting around 35,000 cases in a single day earlier this month. The country implemented serious restrictions last month, shutting down many businesses including shopping malls and cinemas.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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