âLast week, the highest number of COVID-19 cases were reported so far in the pandemic,â WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said. He said the WHO was certain that was an underestimate because of a backlog in testing around the year-end holidays.
In its weekly report on the pandemic, the agency said the weekly count amounted to 9,520,488 new cases â with 41,178 deaths recorded last week compared to 44 680 in the week before that.
WHO officials have long cited a lag between case counts and deaths, with changes in the death counts often trailing about two weeks behind the evolution of case counts. But they have also noted that for several reasons â including rising vaccination rates in some places, and signs that omicron affects the nose and throat more than the lungs -- omicron has not appeared as deadly as the delta variant that preceded it.
Any rise in hospitalizations or deaths in the wake of the latest surge in cases isnât likely to show up for about two weeks.
While omicron seems less severe than delta, especially among people who have been vaccinated, the WHO chief cautioned: âIt does not mean it should be categorized as mild. Just like previous variants, omicron is hospitalizing people, and itâs killing people.â
âIn fact, the tsunami of cases is so huge and quick that it is overwhelming health systems around the world,â the WHO chief told a regular news briefing.
The WHO said the rises in case counts over the last week varied, doubling in the Americas region, but rising only 7% in Africa.
The WHO emergencies chief, Dr. Michael Ryan, said speculation that omicron might be the last variant of the outbreak was âwishful thinkingâ and cautioned: âThere still is a lot of energy in this virus.â
Added Maria Van Kerkhove, WHOâs technical lead on COVID-19: âI think itâs very unlikely that omicron will be the last variant that you will hear us discussing.â
WHO officials called on the public to step up measures to fight the pandemic like getting vaccinated, ventilating rooms, maintaining proper physical distancing and wearing masks â but properly.
âIâm struck by how people actually are wearing masksâ Van Kerkhove said.
âWearing a mask below your chin is useless. And it gives you a false sense of security that you have something on that is protecting you. It will not ... Basically, we are asking everyone to play a part in this.â
Separately, Ryan said the WHOâs work with the International Olympic Committee and China â which is set to host the 2022 Winter Games â led him to be âconfidentâ that the measures that games organizers have put in place were âvery strict and very strong.â
âWe donât at this point see any increased risk of disease transmission in that context,â Ryan said.