Pakistan adds up another 94 coronavirus cases, no death
NIH data shows number of critical patients falling down to 135: EU says moving out of emergency mode on Covid pandemic
April 28, 2022 10:22 AM
Pakistan has registered another 94 coronavirus infections and no death during the last 24 hours (Wednesday), showed the numbers released by the National Institute of Health Pakistan on Thursday morning.
As per the latest NIH data, the death toll remained the same at 30,371, whereas the number of total infections now stood at 1,528,067 after adding the fresh 94 cases.
During the last 24 hours (Wednesday), 17,467 tests were conducted throughout Pakistan whereas the positivity ratio stood at 0.54 percent. The number of patients in critical care was recorded at 135.
https://twitter.com/NIH_Pakistan/status/1519481525066027008
EU moving out of 'emergency mode'
EU officials said Wednesday the 27-nation bloc needed to keep focused on vaccination, testing and surveillance as it transitions out of the "acute" phase of the Covid-19 pandemic.
"We are entering a new phase of the pandemic, as we move from emergency mode to a more sustainable management of Covid-19. Yet, we must remain vigilant," European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement.
"We know the way forward. We need to further step-up vaccination and boosting, and targeted testing -- and we need to continue to coordinate our responses closely in the EU."
Brussels said the bloc's nations should use current low levels of infections "to strengthen their surveillance, healthcare systems, and overall pandemic preparedness" ahead of a possible fresh wave in the autumn.
The recommendations called for stepping up booster jabs and continuing to sequence sufficient samples to detect any new variants.
It said surveillance no longer needed to focus on mass reporting of all Covid cases "but rather on obtaining reliable and representative estimates".
"New variants are not a question of if but rather a question of when. Improvisation and fragmentation are not an option," said Commission vice president Margaritis Schinas.
"Vigilance and preparedness remain as essential as ever and we must continue our work without respite."
Widespread vaccinations across the bloc and the less deadly Omicron variant have seen the levels of people being hospitalised or dying from the virus drop dramatically.
That fall has seen Covid-related restrictions eased or entirely dropped around the 27 nations.
The pandemic has seen the EU ramp up its vaccine production capacity to 3-4 billion jabs a year.
As part of its push unveiled on Wednesday, the commission said it wanted to help maintain the bloc's role as a major vaccine powerhouse over the longer term to help face future health crises.
With inputs from AFP.