BFF-52 COVID-19 pandemic ‘accelerating’: WHO chief

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HEALTH-VIRUS-WHO

COVID-19 pandemic ‘accelerating’: WHO chief

GENEVA, March 23, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – The new coronavirus pandemic is clearly
“accelerating”, the World Health Organization warned Monday, but said it was
still possible to “change the trajectory” of the outbreak.

The remarks came as the number of deaths soared past 15,000, with more
than 341,000 people infected worldwide, according to a tally compiled by AFP
from official sources.

“The pandemic is accelerating,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told
journalists in a virtual news briefing.

He said it took 67 days from the beginning of the outbreak in China in
late December for the virus to infect the first 100,000 people worldwide.

In comparison, it took 11 days for the second 100,000 cases and just four
days for the third 100,000 cases, he said.

The number of cases is believed to represent only a fraction of the true
number of infections, with many countries only testing the most severe cases
in need of hospitalisation.

“We are not helpless bystanders. We can change the trajectory of this
pandemic,” Tedros said.

He called for a mixed approach, which he likened to a football match,
after he and FIFA chief Gianni Infantino jointly launched a campaign aimed at
spreading the message of how to protect against infection “to kick out
coronavirus.”

“You can’t win a football game only by defending. You have to attack as
well,” he said.

“Asking people to stay at home and other physical distancing measures are
an important way of slowing down the spread of the virus and buying time, but
they are defensive measures that will not help us to win,” he warned.

“To win, we need to attack the virus with aggressive and targeted
tactics,” he said, reiterating a call for “testing every suspected case,
isolating and caring for every confirmed case and tracing and quarantining
every close contact.”

– ‘False hopes’? –

But the WHO chief acknowledged that a number of countries were struggling
to take more aggressive measures due to a lack of resources and access to
tests.

Tedros praised the great energy being put into research and development to
find a vaccine and of drugs to treat COVID-19.

But he said that “there is currently no treatment that has been proven to
be effective against COVID-19,” and warned against the use of drugs not
proven to work against the disease.

“Using untested medicines without the right evidence could raise false
hope and even do more harm than good, and cause a shortage of essential
medicines that are needed to treat other diseases,” he said.

Among other things, countries are looking at using antimalarial drugs as a
treatment against the new coronavirus.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 2353 hrs