🎥🔴 Watch LIVE as @hans_kluge and experts from WHO/Europe provide a situation update on #COVID19 in the European Region before answering questions from journalists 👇 bit.ly/3nqBBCq
First and foremost, wishing you a happy and healthy new year for 2021. We were prepared for a challenging start to 2021 and it has been just that. @hans_kluge
One year on from @WHO’s first news report about this virus, we have new tools at our disposal and considerably more knowledge, but we remain in the grip of #COVID19, as cases surge across Europe and we tackle new challenges brought by the mutating virus. @hans_kluge
This moment represents a tipping-point in the course of the pandemic - where science, politics, technology and values must form a united front, in order to push back this persistent and elusive virus. @hans_kluge
The WHO European Region saw over 26 million confirmed COVID-19 cases & over 580,000 confirmed #COVID19 deaths in 2020. In the 27 countries that participate in EuroMOMO’s all-cause excess mortality monitoring, close to 313,000 excess deaths were reported in 2020 @hans_kluge
This marks a 3-fold increase on excess deaths recorded in 2018, and close to a 5-fold increase on excess deaths in 2019. @hans_kluge
As we enter 2021 over 230 million people in the European region are living in countries under full national lockdown with more countries set to announce lockdown measures in the coming week. Transmission across the Region has sustained at very high rates of infection. @hans_kluge
As of 6 January, among all countries and territories in Europe, almost half have a 7-day incidence of over 150 new cases per 100,000 population, and one quarter are seeing a greater than 10% increase in case incidence over the past 2-week period. @hans_kluge
Over one quarter of all European member states and territories are seeing very high incidence and strained health systems @hans_kluge
Where there are signs of stabilization or even decreased incidence in some countries, this needs to be taken with some caution. @hans_kluge
The impact of the holiday period, of gatherings of families, communities, and any relaxation of physical distancing and mask wearing behaviour for example, cannot yet be determined. @hans_kluge
Testing and notification activities may have also been lower during the festive season, resulting in an incomplete picture of the current epidemiological situation. @hans_kluge
Assessing developments over the current days before gradual lifting of any measures in place is the prudent approach required. @hans_kluge
2021 brings with it new opportunities and tools, such as the vaccine, but also new challenges posed by the virus itself. @hans_kluge
Like all viruses, as it has circulated, the #COVID19 virus has changed over time. I do understand the concern around the possible impact of the SARS CoV-2 Variant of Concern (VOC). 22 countries in the WHO European region have detected this new variant. @hans_kluge
This variant is ‘of concern’ as it has increased transmissibility. So far, we understand there is no significant change to the disease this variant produces, meaning the #COVID19 is not more, nor less, severe. @hans_kluge
It spreads across all age groups, and children do not appear to be at higher-risk. It is our assessment that this variant of concern may, over time, replace other circulating lineages as seen in the United Kingdom, and increasingly in Denmark. @hans_kluge
With increased transmissibility and similar disease severity, the variant does, however, raise alarm: without increased control to slow its spread, there will be an increased impact on already stressed and pressurized health facilities. @hans_kluge
I want to urge countries to mitigate this burden by doing all they can to reduce transmission and increase vigilance to identify any new variants by:
1⃣investigating unusually rapid transmission and unexpected disease presentation or severity
2⃣increasing the sequencing of systematically selected subset of SARS-CoV-2 infections – and using this data to inform early public health measures
3⃣sharing this data, so that we can better understand the true extent in circulation of this and other variants. Solidarity in science is crucial at this time. @hans_kluge
This is an alarming situation, which means that for a short period of time need to do more than we have done and to intensify the public health and social measures to be certain we can flatten the steep vertical line in some countries which may not have seen to date. @hans_kluge
It’s the basic measures, with which we are all familiar, that need to be intensified to bring down transmission, lift the strain on our #COVID19 wards, and save lives. @hans_kluge
Adhering to generalised mask wearing, limiting social gathering numbers, physical distancing & hand washing, coupled with adequate testing & tracing systems, proper support for quarantine & isolation, & increasingly vaccination, will work if we all get involved. @hans_kluge
The deployment of #COVID19 vaccine in few countries in the WHO European Region has set the ground of using “vaccine” as one of the tools to contain the ongoing pandemic. There have been reports of varied but promising roll-out of #COVID19 vaccine in the region. @hans_kluge
However, whilst I can reassure you that @WHO and partners are making huge efforts to get the vaccines into every country, it needs every country capable of contributing, donating and supporting equitable access and deployment of the vaccines, to do so. @hans_kluge
Collectively, we simply cannot afford to leave any country, any community behind. @hans_kluge
Given the limited supply of vaccines and the increasing burden on our health systems, prioritisation of vaccination of our health workforce and the most at-risk in our communities is vital. @hans_kluge
Their courage and sacrifice over the last few months cannot be forgotten, it is time to protect and support the frontline workers with the new tools we have. @hans_kluge
At this point in time, and after so many months in cycles of hope and despair, herd immunity is an understandable desired end-point. Yet it cannot be our immediate, primary concern. @hans_kluge
I want to emphasize that vaccine roll-outs are essential, first and foremost, to reduce severe disease in vulnerable groups, release the pressure on our hospitals and avoid the risk of our health systems collapsing. @hans_kluge
Whilst I appreciate that it poses an extraordinary effort, the benefits are phenomenal. @hans_kluge
Following the @WHO Emergency Use Listing last week on the use of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, the Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization (SAGE) met on Tuesday to discuss policy recommendations around the use of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine. @hans_kluge
We have all taken note of the recommendation to make the time between the first and second dose of the vaccine more flexible than what was initially prescribed by the manufacturer. @hans_kluge
It is important that such a decision represents a safe compromise between the limited global production capacity at the moment, & the imperative for governments to protect as many people as possible while reducing the burden of any subsequent 'wave' on the health systems.
I wish also to emphasize that this decision has been taken in accordance with already available evidence on vaccine efficacy from clinical trials. Dr Siddhartha Datta who is with us, may elaborate on this when we take questions. @hans_kluge
Be it vaccine allocation and prioritization, access to medical supplies & tests, public health measures & policies to control the pandemic, we have a responsibility to base decisions on the core values that are at the heart of humanity: solidarity, equity and social justice.
It is the only way out of these uncertain times because no one is safe until everyone is safe.
We have a very serious situation unfolding before us. Weekly cases have now exceeded those reported when the pandemic first peaked in Europe in March. Last week, the region’s weekly tally exceeded 300,000 patients. @hans_kluge
More than half of European countries have reported a greater than 10 per cent increase in cases in the past two weeks. Of those, seven countries have seen newly reported cases increase more than two-fold in the same period. @hans_kluge
Over these past three months, since the first cases were reported, the WHO Regional Office for Europe has worked around the clock to support countries prepare and respond to #COVID19. @hans_kluge
As part of this support we have sent teams into countries to offer on-the-ground support and guidance. One such country was Spain. Yesterday, I received a report from our second mission to the country that indicates an encouraging decline in new #COVID19 cases. @hans_kluge
Greater testing availability, intensive care unit capacity and preventive distancing measures have resulted in Spain being able to carefully ease restrictions. @hans_kluge
Thank you for joining us once again. For over 100 days we have been battling COVID-19 around the world. @hans_kluge
Let me begin by providing you with a snapshot of the current epidemiological situation and trends we have observed across the 53 countries in the WHO European Region. @hans_kluge