From News Nation:
“COVID-19’s global death toll
tops 5 million in under 2 years”
(Relatives of Luis Enrique
Rodriguez, who died of COVID-19, visit where he was buried on a hill at the El
Pajonal de Cogua Natural Reserve, in Cogua, north of Bogota, Colombia, Monday,
Oct. 25, 2021. Rodriguez died May 14, 2021. Relatives bury the ashes of their
loved ones who died of coronavirus and plant a tree in their memory.)
The global death toll from
COVID-19 topped 5 million on Monday, less than two years into a crisis that has
not only devastated poor countries but also humbled wealthy ones with
first-rate health care systems. Together, the United States, the European
Union, Britain and Brazil — all upper-middle- or high-income countries —
account for one-eighth of the world’s population but nearly half of all
reported deaths. The U.S. alone has recorded over 740,000 lives lost, more than
any other nation. “This is a defining moment in our lifetime,” said Dr. Albert
Ko, an infectious disease specialist at the Yale School of Public Health. “What
do we have to do to protect ourselves so we don’t get to another 5 million?”
The death toll, as tallied by
Johns Hopkins University, is about equal to the populations of Los Angeles and
San Francisco combined. It rivals the number of people killed in battles among
nations since 1950, according to estimates from the Peace Research Institute
Oslo. Globally, COVID-19 is now the third leading cause of death, after heart
disease and stroke. The staggering figure is almost certainly an undercount
because of limited testing and people dying at home without medical attention,
especially in poor parts of the world, such as India.
Hot spots have shifted over the
22 months since the outbreak began, turning different places on the world map
red. Now, the virus is pummeling Russia, Ukraine and other parts of Eastern
Europe, especially where rumors, misinformation and distrust in government have
hobbled vaccination efforts. In Ukraine, only 17% of the adult population is
fully vaccinated; in Armenia, only 7%.“What’s uniquely different about this
pandemic is it hit hardest the high-resource countries,” said Dr. Wafaa
El-Sadr, director of ICAP, a global health
center at Columbia University. “That’s the irony of COVID-19.”
Wealthier nations with longer
life expectancies have larger proportions of older people, cancer survivors and
nursing home residents, all of whom are especially vulnerable to COVID-19,
El-Sadr noted. Poorer countries tend to have larger shares of children, teens
and young adults, who are less likely to fall seriously ill from the
coronavirus. India, despite its terrifying delta surge that peaked in early
May, now has a much lower reported daily death rate than wealthier Russia, the
U.S. or Britain, though there is uncertainty around its figures. The seeming
disconnect between wealth and health is a paradox that disease experts will be
pondering for years. But the pattern that is seen on the grand scale, when
nations are compared, is different when examined at closer range. Within each
wealthy country, when deaths and infections are mapped, poorer neighborhoods
are hit hardest. In the U.S., for example, COVID-19 has taken an outsize toll
on Black and Hispanic people, who are more likely than white people to live in
poverty and have less access to health care. “When we get out our microscopes,
we see that within countries, the most vulnerable have suffered most,” Ko said.
Wealth has also played a role in
the global vaccination drive, with rich countries accused of locking up
supplies. The U.S. and others are already dispensing booster shots at a time
when millions across Africa haven’t received a single dose, though the rich
countries are also shipping hundreds of millions of shots to the rest of the
world. Africa remains the world’s least vaccinated region, with just 5% of the
population of 1.3 billion people fully covered. In Kampala, Uganda, Cissy
Kagaba lost her 62-year-old mother on Christmas Day and her 76-year-old father
days later. “Christmas will never be the same for me,” said Kagaba, an
anti-corruption activist in the East African country that has been through
multiple lockdowns against the virus and where a curfew remains in place.
The pandemic has united the globe
in grief and pushed survivors to the breaking point. “Who else is there now?
The responsibility is on me. COVID has changed my life,” said 32-year-old Reena
Kesarwani, a mother of two boys, who was left to manage her late husband’s
modest hardware store in a village in India. Her husband, Anand Babu Kesarwani,
died at 38 during India’s crushing coronavirus surge earlier this year. It
overwhelmed one of the most chronically underfunded public health systems in
the world and killed tens of thousands as hospitals ran out of oxygen and
medicine. In Bergamo, Italy, once the site of the West’s first deadly wave,
51-year-old Fabrizio Fidanza was deprived of a final farewell as his
86-year-old father lay dying in the hospital. He is still trying to come to
terms with the loss more than a year later. “For the last month, I never saw
him,’’ Fidanza said during a visit to his father’s grave. “It was the worst
moment. But coming here every week, helps me.” Today, 92% of Bergamo’s eligible
population have had at least one shot, the highest vaccination rate in Italy.
The chief of medicine at Pope John XXIII Hospital, Dr. Stefano Fagiuoli, said
he believes that’s a clear result of the city’s collective trauma, when the
wail of ambulances was constant. In Lake City, Florida, LaTasha Graham, 38,
still gets mail almost daily for her 17-year-old daughter, Jo’Keria, who died
of COVID-19 in August, days before starting her senior year of high school. The
teen, who was buried in her cap and gown, wanted to be a trauma surgeon. “I
know that she would have made it. I know that she would have been where she
wanted to go,” her mother said. In Rio de Janeiro, Erika Machado scanned the
list of names engraved on a long, undulating sculpture of oxidized steel that
stands in Penitencia cemetery as an homage to some of Brazil’s COVID-19
victims. Then she found him: Wagner Machado, her father. “My dad was the love
of my life, my best friend,” said Machado, 40, a saleswoman who traveled from
Sao Paulo to see her father’s name. “He was everything to me.”
^ Another staggering Covid Number
and yet there are still people around the US and the rest of the world who
continue to treat Covid as though it wasn’t real or that it was a game they can
use to get what they want (screaming and attacking innocent people.) ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/health/coronavirus/covid-outbreak-5-million-dead/
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