Good morning. This is Jonathan Spira reporting. Here now the news of the pandemic from across the globe on the 1,212nd day of the pandemic.
In news we cover today, the former White House coronavirus czar said that the virus could still surprise us, the death toll in China from Covid rose dramatically, and a French doctor who touted bogus Covid cures now stands accused of illegally experimenting on the homeless.
UNITED STATES
Former White House Covid Czar Ashish Jha believes that the coronavirus could still surprise us. While things are looking up, Jha told reporters that the country still needs to overcome its distrust of vaccines as well as the origins of the virus.
“The virus, right now, is in retreat,” he said in an interview with Yahoo Finance. “While it will be with us for probably forever, we now have the ability to manage this virus in a way we did not two to three years ago. And that makes all the difference.”
“There is a temptation to say it’s all over and we don’t have to think about Covid anymore,” Jha said. “The way I look at it is the virus can still surprise us” as it continues to evolve.
GLOBAL
Health authorities in China reported that 239 people died from SARS-CoV-2 in June in a significant uptick from the previous month.
The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention had reported 164 deaths in May and none at all in April and March.
Meanwhile, the U.K. government lost its bid to keep former Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s unredacted WhatsApp messages and diaries from being made public at an official Covid-19 inquiry, after a court ruled in favor of a motion by the inquiry chair, Baroness Hallett
Finally, Didier Raoult, a French doctor who popularized the now-discredited hydroxychloroquine treatment for SARS-CoV-2, is under facing allegations for a pattern of unauthorized experiments on homeless people.
A report in the news magazine Le Point said that Raoult and colleagues violated the nation’s 1988 Huriet Law that established rights for participants in biomedical research trials. Researchers cited in the article argued that Raoult’s team had conducted unauthorized studies while collecting blood samples from homeless people in the 1990s.
TODAY’S STATISTICS
Now here are the daily statistics for Thursday, July 6.
As of Thursday morning, the world has recorded 691.19 million Covid-19 cases, an increase of 0.02 million from the previous day, and 6.89 million deaths, according to Worldometer, a service that tracks such information. In addition, 663.73 million people worldwide have recovered from the virus, an increase of 0.05 million from the previous day.
The reader should note that infrequent reporting from some sources may appear as spikes in new case figures or death tolls.
Worldwide, the number of active coronavirus cases as of Thursday at press time is 20,566,151, a derease of 11,000. Out of that figure, 99.8%, or 20,528,886, are considered mild, and 0.2%, or 37,265, are listed as critical. The percentage of cases considered critical has not changed over the past eight months.
The United States reported 72,136 new cases in the period May 4 through May 10, a figure that is down 26% over the same period one week earlier, according to the most recent data available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The test positivity rate for Covid for the week ending July 1 was 8.22%, up from 8.2% the prior week, according to data from the CDC Respiratory Virus Laboratory Emergency Department Network Surveillance, or RESP-LENS. By comparison, the test positive rate for influenza was 1.77% and, for RSV, that figure was 0.51%.
The death toll from Covid was 1.1% in the week ending June 24, 2023, a figure that is unchanged over the past week.
Finally, the number of hospital admissions from Covid for seven days ending June 24 was 6,198, a figure that is down 5.9% over the preceding 7-day period.
As of March 25, 2023, the Morning News Brief began to update case data as well as death tolls on a weekly basis. In addition, as of May 15, 2023, the Morning News Brief has pressed pause on certain data sets as we assess the update of changes in reporting by U.S. health authorities at the CDC. Where appropriate, the Morning News Brief has reintroduced data sets are they have become available.
Since the start of the pandemic, the United States has, as of Thursday, recorded over 107.3 million cases, a higher figure than any other country, and a death toll of 1.17 million. India has the world’s second highest number of officially recorded cases, 45 million, and a reported death toll of 531,903.
The newest data from Russia’s Rosstat state statistics service showed that, at the end of July 2022, the number of Covid or Covid-related deaths since the start of the pandemic there in April 2020 is now 823,623, giving the country the world’s second highest pandemic-related death toll, behind the United States. Rosstat last reported that 3,284 people died from the coronavirus or related causes in July 2022, down from 5,023 in June, 7,008 in May and 11,583 in April.
Meanwhile, France is the country with the third highest number of cases, with 40.1 million, and Germany is in the number four slot, with 38.4 million total cases.
Brazil, which has recorded the third highest number of deaths as a result of the virus, 703,964, has recorded 37.7 million cases, placing it in the number five slot.
The other five countries with total case figures over the 20 million mark are Japan, with just over 33.8 million cases, South Korea, with 32 million cases, placing it in the number seven slot, and Italy, with 25.9 million, as number eight, as well as the United Kingdom, with 24.6 million, and Russia, with 22.9 million.
VACCINATION SPOTLIGHT
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that, as of June 15, the total number of updated bivalent doses given in the United States was 139.9 million.
Older – and no longer updated – data from the CDC shows that over 270.2 million people in the United States – or 81.4% – have received at least one dose of the coronavirus vaccine as of May 11, 2023. Of that population, 69.5%, or 230.6 million people, have received two doses of vaccine, and the total number of doses that have been dispensed in the United States is now over 676.7 million. Breaking this down further, 92.23% of the population over the age of 18 – or 238.2 million people – has received at least a first inoculation and 79.1% of the same group – or 204.3 million people – is fully vaccinated.
Some 70.3% of the world population has received at least one dose of coronavirus vaccine by Thursday, according to Our World in Data, an online scientific publication that tracks such information. So far, 13.47 billion doses of the vaccine have been administered on a global basis and 36,334 doses are now administered each day.
Meanwhile, only 32.2% of people in low-income countries have received one dose, while in countries such as Canada, China, Denmark, France, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United States, at least 75% of the population has received at least one dose of vaccine.
Only a handful of the world’s poorest countries – Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia and Nepal – have reached the 70% mark in vaccinations. Many countries, however, are under 20% and, in countries such as Haiti, Senegal, and Tanzania, for example, vaccination rates remain at or below 10%.
In addition, with the beginning of vaccinations in North Korea in late September, Eritrea remains the only country in the world that has not administered vaccines.
Anna Breuer contributed reporting to this story.
(Photo: Accura Media Group)