South Africa has identified 4,146 new cases of Covid-19 in the past 24 hours, the National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD), a division of the National Health Laboratory Service, has announced.
This brings the total number of laboratory-confirmed cases to 3.780,444. This increase represents a 18.3% positivity rate.
The majority of new cases today are from Gauteng (53%), followed by Kwa-Zulu Natal (23%). Western Cape accounted for 11%; Free State accounted for 4%; Eastern Cape, Mpumalanga and North West each accounted for 2% respectively; and Limpopo and Northern Cape each accounted for 1% respectively of today’s new cases.
The country has also reported four deaths that occurred in the past 24 – 48 hours. This brings the total fatalities to 100,355 to date.
24.423,181 tests have been conducted in both public and private sectors.
There has been an increase of 64 hospital admissions in the past 24 hours.
Taiwan recorded more than 10,000 new infections for the first time on Thursday following the government’s decision to move away from its zero-Covid strategy and begin living with the coronavirus.
The shift leaves China — and its financial hub Hong Kong — as the only major economy still sticking to the zero-tolerance strategy even as Omicron breaks through those defences and forces painful lockdowns.
“We have 11,353 local infection cases, two deaths and 164 imported Covid-19 cases,” health minister Chen Shih-chung said at an afternoon press briefing.
Taiwan has largely closed its borders and implemented strict quarantine rules throughout the pandemic, keeping infection numbers low.
An outbreak last year prompted the temporary reimposition of economically painful social distancing measures until it was brought under control.
Infections are once again rising but the island’s leaders have signalled they will follow other former zero-Covid economies like Singapore, Australia and New Zealand by opening up and accepting that cases will spike.
According to Taiwan’s health ministry, 99.7 percent of 51,504 infections recorded since January 1 this year have been mild or asymptomatic — with seven Covid-19 deaths reported over that period.
“We are at a phase where (infection) cases are certain to increase rapidly, which is unavoidable,” Health Minister Chen Shih-chung told reporters.
Chen warned that the island’s daily infection cases could more than double to 37,000 in a week.
Around 80 percent of Taiwan’s population are double vaccinated, while 58 percent have taken a third booster.
However, the vaccine take-up among the elderly, the most at-risk demographic, remains a vulnerability for Taiwan with only 59 percent of over 75s having had the full three jabs.
Across capital city Taipei this week, residents could be seen lining up outside pharmacies to buy test kits, which are now being rationed by the government.
The government has begun a new plan to shorten home isolation for close contacts of Covid-19 cases to 3 days, down from 10, if a rapid antigen test proves to be negative at the end of the isolation period.
It is also considering relaxing the 10-day quarantine rules for foreign arrivals.
Since the pandemic began Taiwan has reported 88,000 cases and 860 deaths.
Additional reporting by AFP
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