The World Health Organisation said this afternoon that Coronavirus cases have tripled across Europe in the past six weeks, accounting for nearly half of infections globally.
Hospital admission rates have also doubled, although intensive care admissions remain low.
In a statement on Tuesday, the WHO’s Europe director Dr Hans Kluge described Covid-19 as “a nasty and potentially deadly illness” that people should not underestimate.
He said super-infectious relatives of the Omicron variant were driving new waves of disease across the continent and repeat infections could potentially lead to long Covid.
The WHO said the 53 countries in its European region, which stretches to central Asia, reported nearly three million new coronavirus infections last week and that the virus was killing about 3,000 people every week.
Covid-19 infections have been increasing across the country since the start of June, driven by the subvariants Omicron BA.4 and BA.5.
Globally, Covid-19 cases have increased for the past five weeks, even as countries have scaled back on testing.
“With rising cases we’re also seeing a rise in hospitalisations, which are only set to increase further in the autumn and winter months,” Dr Kluge said.
“This forecast presents a huge challenge to the health workforce in country after country, already under enormous pressure dealing with unrelenting crises since 2020.”
UK
The number of deaths involving coronavirus registered each week in England and Wales has risen for the third week in a row.
A total of 423 deaths registered in the seven days to July 8 mentioned Covid-19 on the death certificate, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) today. This is up 27 per cent on the previous week and is the highest number since the seven days to May 20.
The figures suggest deaths are once again on an upwards trend, following several weeks where the numbers had shown a steady fall.
Earlier this week, editors of two British medical journals said that at no other time have so many parts of the NHS been so close to collapse.