🛑 The sheer scale of the crisis unfolding in India has grabbed worldwide attention, but its health system is not the only one under strain
In recent weeks countries ranging from Laos to Thailand have all been reporting significant surges in cases ~ 🧵 telegraph.co.uk/global-health/…
According to @who data, cases are the highest they have ever been and countries that had prided themselves on so far beating the virus are now succumbing to fierce waves of infection driven by new variants
Nepal's long porous border with India has put it at risk of being swamped by infections from its neighbour
The country is now recording 57 times as many cases as a month ago, with 44% of tests now coming back positive, according to the Red Cross
Elsewhere in Asia, some of these worrying spikes are in countries that had until recently managed to avoid the heavy levels of infection seen elsewhere
In Laos, last week, cases jumped more than 200-fold in a month, while Thailand's caseload has more than doubled in that time
Cambodia had also managed to record one of the world's smallest caseloads, until it climbed from about 500 in late February to more than 16,000 now
With hospitals running out of beds, authorities have had to transform schools and wedding party halls into Covid treatment centres
Even Vietnam, which has among the lowest number of infections in Southeast Asia, is imposing curbs on public gatherings after reporting a 131% jump in April over the prior month
America and Europe may be viewing a return to normality driven by successful vaccine programmes, but such outbreaks are predicted to continue in developing countries, even as others put the pandemic behind them
Rachel is a victim of a conflict that the world has learned to forget
Since 2017, frenzied armed gangs in the northeast of the Democratic Republic of Congo have forced almost half the population of a region the size of Ireland to flee their homes
The fighting has created one of the largest humanitarian crises on earth, with Ituri Province at the centre
Little aid reaches this corner of the DRC and the nation is now home to 5m refugees, second only to Syria
💉This sleepy town in Brazil is running a huge coronavirus vaccine experiment
The aim is to track the real-world impact of jabs, as scientists work to understand how effective Covid vaccines are at halting transmission
@djknowles22 explains the science behind the methodology⬇️
🇧🇷As the pandemic hits new heights in Brazil and its vaccination drive stutters, Serrana's residents can barely believe their luck: every adult has been offered at least one dose of a Covid-19 shot
The highly anticipated World Health Organization report on the origins of Sars-Cov-2 has concluded that a leak from a laboratory, while possible, is “extremely unlikely”
Instead, the virus is most likely to have been passed from bats via an “intermediate animal host” to humans before sparking an “explosive outbreak” in Wuhan in December 2019
The country reported 3,000 daily deaths on Tuesday and is close to reaching 300k deaths in total from the virus
“We are close to or facing a catastrophe,” a medical bulletin read last week, adding that intensive care occupancy is above 90% across half of its 26 states
And while Brazil is currently the epicentre of the latest Covid resurgence the picture is worrying in a number of other regions, the @who says
After six weeks of declining numbers of fatalities the death rate rose by 3% globally in the last seven days to 60,414 in total
🔓You might have noticed that The Telegraph has lowered its paywall until 8am tomorrow
We're always free to read but in case you needed any more of a reason to give us a follow, here is a recap of our best stories of the year
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It's hard to believe a whole year has passed since the UK first went into lockdown
Revisit @niccijsmith's exclusive interview with Taiwan's Yin-Ching Chuang, the first foreign official to enter Wuhan – the city where it all began telegraph.co.uk/global-health/…
The last twelve months have been just as gruelling for those on the front line
In 2014 the government embedded media literacy into the curriculum, teaching children from the age of six to read sources critically telegraph.co.uk/global-health/…
Finland has more reason than most to target disinformation
In 2014, when neighbouring Russia annexed Crimea Finns say their neighbours began bombarding them with disinformation