Advertisement
Advertisement
Coronavirus pandemic
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
A man walks past a mural in New Delhi depicting a woman wearing a mask on Saturday. Photo: AFP

Worldwide coronavirus cases surge past 50 million after 30-day spike

  • It took 32 days for the number of infections to rise from 30 million to 40 million, but just 21 days to add another 10 million
  • The United States has the highest number of infections, topping 10 million cases

Global coronavirus infections exceeded 50 million on Sunday, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University, with a second wave of the virus in the past 30 days accounting for a quarter of the total.

October was the worst month for the pandemic so far, with the United States becoming the first country to report more than 100,000 daily cases. It is also the first nation to surpass 10 million infections.

The latest seven-day average shows global daily infections are rising by more than 540,000.

More than 1.25 million people have died from the respiratory disease that emerged in China late last year.

01:40

US coronavirus: Wisconsin residents queue for hours to get Covid-19 tests as infection rate soars

US coronavirus: Wisconsin residents queue for hours to get Covid-19 tests as infection rate soars

The pandemic’s recent acceleration has been ferocious. It took 32 days for the number of cases to rise from 30 million to 40 million. It took just 21 days to add another 10 million.

Europe, with about 12 million cases, is the worst-affected region, overtaking Latin America. Europe accounts for 24 per cent of Covid-19 deaths.

The region is logging about 1 million new infections every three days or so, according to a Reuters analysis. That is 51 per cent of the global total.

Coronavirus mutation in minks could threaten vaccine efficacy

France is recording 54,440 cases a day on the latest seven-day average, a higher rate than India with a far bigger population.

The global second wave is testing health care systems across Europe, prompting Germany, France and Britain to order many citizens back to their homes again.

Denmark, which imposed a new lockdown on its population in several northern areas, ordered the culling of its 17 million minks after a mutation of the coronavirus found in the animals spread to humans.

A medical worker provides care to a Covid-19 patient at a hospital in Saint-Etienne, France on Friday. Photo: AFP

The United States, with about 20 per cent of global cases, is facing its worst surge, recording more than 100,000 daily coronavirus cases on the latest seven-day average. It reported a record of more than 130,000 cases on Saturday.

The latest US surge coincided with the last month of election campaigning in which President Donald Trump minimised the severity of the pandemic and his successful challenger, Joe Biden, urged a more science-based approach.

Trump’s rallies, some open-air and with few masks and little social distancing, led to 30,000 additional confirmed cases and likely led to more than 700 deaths, Stanford University economists estimated in a research paper.

In Asia, India has the world’s second-highest caseload but has seen a steady slowdown since September, despite the start of the Hindu festival season. Total cases exceeded 8.5 million cases on Friday and the daily average is 46,200, according to Reuters data.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Global tally passes 50m as pandemic accelerates coronavirus cases exceed 50 million after 30-day spike
Post