BFF-06 Brazil virus death toll passes 130,000

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HEALTH-VIRUS-BRAZIL-TOLL

Brazil virus death toll passes 130,000

RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept 12, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Brazil’s death toll from Covid-19
surpassed 130,000 Friday, amid cautious optimism over signs the virus is
finally slowing in the hard-hit South American country.

With the second-highest death toll in the pandemic after the United
States, Brazil has been devastated by the new coronavirus, which has now
claimed 130,396 lives in the country, according to the health ministry.

Brazil, home to 212 million people, has registered nearly 4.3 million
infections, behind only the US and India.

After a seemingly endless plateau in which the number of daily deaths was
regularly over 1,000 from June to August, Brazil’s curve appears to be
descending at last.

The average number of deaths per day for the past week was 696.

“The models indicate we are past the peak… and starting a descent,
albeit with levels that are still unacceptably high,” immunologist Guilherme
Werneck told a seminar this week organized by Brazil’s leading public health
research institute, the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz).

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro faces criticism for his handling of the
virus, which he has downplayed as a “little flu.”

Now on his third health minister of the crisis — an army general with no
prior medical experience — the far-right president regularly attacks the
stay-at-home measures recommended by global health authorities, insisting the
economic damage would be worse than the disease.

Instead, he is pushing the anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine as a
remedy, despite studies showing it is ineffective against Covid-19.

Meanwhile, the virus has proved devastating for some of Brazil’s most
vulnerable groups, notably residents of impoverished favelas, or slums, and
indigenous communities in the Amazon rainforest.

The fear now is that as the country emerges from lockdowns — which only
had limited compliance to begin with — the number of infections and deaths
will surge again.

“To tell you the truth, the first wave still isn’t over in Brazil,” the
epidemiological modelling specialist Thomas Mellan of Imperial College London
told the Fiocruz seminar.

BSS/AFP/SSS/0908 hrs