Time for another French Covid update. In the last week, the picture has darkened again. Cases are still growing steadily but acute cases, which fell from May until late August, are growing rapidly. I fear the “second wave” is here.
1/10
Seven days ago, there were 464 C19 patients in intensive care in France. Last night there were 599. Seven days ago, there were 3,464 hospital cases. Now it’s above 5,000 again – ie 5,003 – for the first time since mid-August.
2/10
These numbers are nowhere near the late March/early April peak but the trend is accelerating. France’s chief scientific adviser, Jean-François Delfraissy, says that the government faces “difficult decisions” in the next few days 3/10
Here is my crunch of the last six days figures.
New confirmed cases are running at an average of 7,320, compared to 5,518 the previous week and 4,668 the week before that. The new daily peaks were 8,975 on 4 September and 8,577 yesterday.
4/10
Some of this increase is due to increased testing – a stampede since the government made testing free for all in July. Health lab staff this week complained they couldn’t keep up with the demand. There are long queues in Paris and elsewhere.
5/10
More worrying is the jump in acute cases, which remained low until two weeks ago. Talk of an “epidemic without sick people” is no longer justified, I fear.
6/10
In the last 6 days, there have been 126 Covid-19 deaths. This is an average of 21 a day, compared to 18.5 in the previous 6 days and 13.2 in the week before that. About 30 earlier C19 deaths have been reclassified. The new total is therefore 30,794. 7/10
Covid patients in intensive care have risen in the last week by an average of 21 a day; all hospital cases by 55.3 a day. These averages are more than double the previous week. The Marseilles area – once remarkably Covid free – is in danger of running short of ICU places. 8/10
What will the government do? Delfraissy, head of the committee of scientific advisers, says new nationwide restrictions – or a second lockdown – are NOT on the cards. He is calling for local clampdowns and more protection/isolation for the vulnerable and elderly.
9/10
Some experts still believe that the virus has mutated into something less threatening. Prof Didier Raoult, of hydroxychloroquine fame, says he has identified 7 mutations of the virus. This is, he says, “not bad news” - a sign that the virus is “losing the battle”.
Hmmm.
10/10
Add... Guardian reporting that French government will announce new anti-Covid measures tomorrow.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with John Lichfield

John Lichfield Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @john_lichfield

12 Sep
Second Covid wave or not, the Gilets Jaunes (yellow vests) plan a mass return to French streets and roundabouts today. By 11am there had been 68 pre-demo arrests in Paris, mostly for carrying weapons or missiles. Marches are also planned in provincial cities. 1/7
Other promised/or threatened GJ “mass returns” this summer have fizzled out. This one, planned for weeks, is likely to be bigger – and more violent. Police anticipate at least 5,000 people in Paris, including 1,000 “black block” hard-left militia types.
2/7
To recap, Gilet Jaunes gave up their demos in March after 71 weekends - starting as a broad protest against high fuel taxes, the political elite etc and becoming something sectarian/anti-capitalist. Numbers dwindled to very few before Covid forced diehards off the streets. 3/7
Read 7 tweets
3 Sep
Time for a French Covid numbers update.
In the 6 days since my last thread, the picture has darkened - not dramatically but darkened all the same. For the first time since mid-April, the number of C19 patients in French hospitals and intensive care units is now growing daily 1/7
There were 7,157 new Covid cases confirmed today, following 7,017 yesterday. In the previous 4 days there had been something of a lull, with figures between 3,082 and 5,453. 2/7
More worryingly, the pattern of hospital and ICU numbers, which had been falling steadily since April, seems to have reversed. There is no flood of patients like March and April but the number of acute cases is increasing steadily. So are deaths. 3/7
Read 7 tweets
29 Aug
Here is a new French Covid numbers crunch…
With 7,379 new cases confirmed in the 24hrs to 2pm yesterday, the official daily count of Covid-19 in France has almost doubled in just over a week. Santé Publique France now talks of an “exponential” 2nd spread of the virus. BUT…1/10
There is still no significant impact on the number of deaths or the population of C19 patients in hospitals and ICU units. New hospital and ICU entries are growing slowly – but there is nothing like the influx seen in late March/early April. 2/10
Is this just a matter of time? Or is the virus less nasty now? According to the government, low hospital/death stats are misleading. Many new cases are among young adults/the middle aged. Half are symptom-free. As C19 spreads to the vulnerable, acute cases could explode.

3/10
Read 10 tweets
21 Aug
Here is an extended French Covid update and number crunch...
The daily figures for new Covid cases in France yesterday were dreadful – 4,771, which is the highest in 24 hours since the height of the crisis on 1 April.
BUT…1/10
Unlike March-April, hospital and intensive care cases in France remain low. Despite the resurgence in the last month, acute cases have fallen. There were 436 people in ICU on 23 July but 380 yesterday. There were 5,957 hospital cases on 23 July and 4,748 yesterday. 2/10
Similarly, the number of deaths has remained mercifully low, despite the boom in Covid cases which started over a month ago. The average mortality since 23 July – ie 4 weeks ago – is 10.6 a day. Total now 30,480. 3/10
Read 10 tweets
10 Aug
Setting out today on my longest expedition in an electric car across France - from Normandy to Angers to Ile d'Oleron to Tarn et Garonne to Tours and back to Normandy in 6 days. About 1,500 k's, keeping off autoroutes. My Renault Zoe has 300k's battery range. Nerve-racking.
Wracking
Just waiting for the last 1% of battery and off we go ImageImage
Read 43 tweets
1 Aug
Is France suffering a second wave of Covid-19 infections? The figures are worrying but still not alarming. New confirmed cases have been running at just under 1,400 a day for the last 3 days. But there is no new spike in hospital admissions or intensive care patients – yet. 1/8
Taking the last 3 days, based on official figures, new cases are running at an average 1,371 a day. Taking the last 7 days it is 912. Until Mid-July, it was 500-600. Santé Publique France says that “young adults” are most affected. More than half the cases have no symptoms. 2/8
Nineteen départements (counties) have now passed the “vigilance” level of 10 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. In France as a whole, it has risen from 6.6 to 9.5 – just under the first level of alert. The level is rising in 70 départements (out of 102, including overseas ones). 3/8
Read 8 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!