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We’re tracking the ebb and flow of covid as it surges around the world, dies back, then surges again.
This week there’s all sorts of news, good and bad, about the virus that’s still changing our lives more than a
year after the UK first locked down. While it feels fantastic to be edging back towards a kind of normality in the UK, other nations aren’t faring very well. It matters to us here in the UK because until every country on the planet has beaten covid back sufficiently, we’ll still be at risk from visitors. And the more people the virus infects, the more risk there is of more dangerous variants emerging.
On the bright side, however dangerous the virus’ potential variants become, our UVC technology is highly likely to be able to kill it off in the same way it kills off horrors like Ebola, MERS, SAS, and hospital acquired infections like MRSA.
Thank you to New Scientist magazine for the news.
Worldwide covid death toll passes the 3 million mark
According to Johns Hopkins University in the USA, 3.08 million of us have died of covid across the world and we’ve seen over 144.9 million confirmed cases so far. But they say the real number is probably ‘much
higher’. So far, worldwide, more than 534 million people have had at least one jab.
Dodgy information about smokers and covid is withdrawn
We need to be wary of junk science. If you’ve heard the news that smokers are 23% less likely to get covid than people who don’t smoke, it’s nonsense. The study was recently withdrawn by the European
Respiratory Journal, where it was first published, when it turned out two of the authors had undeclared links with the tobacco industry and hadn’t bothered to disclose the conflict of interest.
More ad hoc lockdowns down under
Australia has announced a three day lockdown in Perth and the Peel region. The one person responsible for the new lockdown had travelled widely in the region, having originally been quarantined in a hotel and
tested negative. Five days later another test showed them to be positive.
Covid, Japan and the Olympics
Japan is about to declare a state of emergency in Tokyo, Osaka and Kyoto in an effort to stop a sudden rise in cases before the 2021 Olympics. If the Olympics are actually going to go ahead in July, Japan must bring
infections under control by late May. So far they’ve had more success limiting the spread than many other countries. Japan has suffered about 550,000 cases and 10,000 deaths, compared with 4.4 million cases and
130,000 deaths in the UK. At the moment they’re seeing 36 cases per million people every day, against 37 per million in the UK, 200 in India, 250 in Germany and 700 in Turkey. But Japan is also seeing new variants spreading despite local restrictions.
The Oxford/AstraZeneca and Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines are better than anyone hoped
Just one dose of the Oxford/AstraZeneca or Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine cuts the risk of infection by 66%, according to the latest analysis of test results from 350,000 people in the UK. 21 days after their first jab
people were 57% less likely to catch an asymptomatic infections and over 70% less at risk of ‘symptomatic infections’ compared with people who hadn’t had a jab.
At the same time it looks like just 32 people were admitted to hospital with covid more than three weeks after getting at least one jab of the Pfizer/BioNTech or Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccines. And it’s great to know
covid isn’t the leading cause of death in England and Wales any more, with the virus causing just 9% of deaths across both nations and case numbers falling fast in England.
India in crisis
At the moment India is in a crisis, with well over 300,000 new cases a day being recorded. This is a new
global record and it means the virus has an excellent opportunity to create new variants. Oxygen supplies are running out and there are distressing scenes on TV revealing mass funerals and people waiting
outside hospitals. The true number of cases could be 20 - 30 times higher, with as many as 9 million people a day in India being infected.
US demand for vaccinations falls
Against a background of impressive Biden-led vaccine success, some of the USA’s biggest vaccination sites are closing down because of a lack of demand. Over half of US adults have had at least one jab, but officials are saying that delivering the next 25% will be “a lot harder.”
Keeping up the good work
Have you taken a look at our UVC LED covid disinfection technology yet? If you run a business it provides an excellent way to clean the air and surfaces within a short timescale, messing with the virus’ DNA and RNA
so it can’t reproduce. Our tech is fast and efficient, and it’s proving a highly effective business saver.