According to a report by DN, in the last week, Europe recorded
1.4 million infections by Covid-19 and 3,250 deaths. The numbers were announced
by Richard Peabody, head of the WHO/Europe High Pathogenic Threat Team to Lusa,
who even said: "We cannot afford to be complacent at the moment."
The WHO/Europe leader took advantage of the occasion to
highlight that the increase in the number of infections has been felt since the
beginning of October, and with a particular incidence in Germany, France and
Italy, which should oblige all countries to prepare for a possible increase in
hospitalisations. Richard Peabody also justified this scenario with the fact
that we are approaching winter, knowing that a worsening of respiratory
diseases in this period is already normal.
Portugal subvariants
In Portugal, for now, and according to the analysis made to DN
by Professor Carlos Antunes, who is part of the team at the Faculty of Sciences
of the University of Lisbon that has been dedicated to modelling the evolution
of Covid-19 since the beginning of the pandemic, "the situation seems to
be stable, but surveillance is needed through disease severity factors, due to
the impact that the new subvariants, BQ.1 and BQ.1.1, may have on our
population".
Carlos Antunes underlined the fact that it can be
“considered that Portugal is in a controlled situation” at all levels, but
warns that, in recent weeks, there has been “a slight increase in intensive
care admissions and deaths”. It is true that "this increase is being
mobilised mainly by a single region of the country, Lisbon and Vale do Tejo
(LVT), although in the last week the Central Region also began to show signs of
this increase", but it is necessary to "continue with surveillance".
According to the professor at the Faculty of Sciences, from
October 2nd to 17th, the general number of admissions rose from 390 to 480, and
the number of beds in Intensive Care went from 22 to 38. A situation that he
believes still has to do with the effect of Ómicron's subvariant, BA.5, which
is still the dominant one in the country. "The increase in infections
started in younger people, still in September, due to the beginning of school,
but two to three weeks later it spread to the rest of the population, leading
to this increase, but without great repercussion in terms of deaths".
The data released on the 24th by the Directorate-General for
Health, referring to Sunday, the 23rd, revealed the existence of 468 cases and
11 deaths, although the daily average is 6.5 deaths.