WHO says coronavirus pandemic is now being driven by younger adults


MANILA – The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday that it was concerned that the new spread of coronavirus was being driven by people in their 20s, 30s and 40s, many of whom were unaware that they were infected, a danger to vulnerable groups.

WHO officials said this month that the proportion of young people among the infected worldwide has increased, putting vulnerable sectors of the population at risk worldwide, including the elderly and sick people in densely populated areas with poor health care services. “The epidemic is changing,” WHO Western Pacific Regional Director Takeshi Kasai told a virtual briefing. ‘People in their 20s, 30s and 40s are increasingly driving the spread. Many are unaware that they are infected. ”

“This increases the risk of spillovers for the more vulnerable,” he added. A rise in new cases has prompted some countries to set up ramparts as companies race to find a vaccine for a virus that has threatened economies, killed more than 770,000 people and infected nearly 22 million, according to a Reuters census.

Young people gather at the Navy Ground in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Getty Images

Countries that put their own interests ahead of others in trying to secure supplies of a possible vaccine are exacerbating the pandemic, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in Geneva on Tuesday. “(Trade) strategic and global is actually in the national interest of every country – no one is safe until everyone is safe,” he said in a virtual briefing calling for an end to “fax nationalism.”

Surges in infections have been reported in countries that have been shown to have the virus under control, including Vietnam, which until recently went three months without domestic transmission due to its aggressive mitigation efforts. “What we are observing is not just a restart. “We believe this is a signal that we have entered a new phase of pandemic in the Asia-Pacific,” Kasai said.

He said countries were better able to reduce constraints on lives and economies by combining early detection and response to manage infections. While mutations were observed, the WHO still saw the virus as “relatively stable,” Kasai said.

Young people wearing masks while sitting on a car lock in Naples, Italy.
Young people wearing masks while sitting on a car lock in Naples, Italy.
Reuters

WHO also reminds drugmakers to follow all necessary research and development steps when making a vaccine. Socorro Escalante, its technical officer and adviser on medical policy, said the WHO was coordinating with Russia, which this month became the first country to grant regulatory approval for a COVID-19 vaccine.

“We hope to get the answer in terms of the evidence of this new vaccine,” Escalante said.

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