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Latin America Resuming Social and Public Life Too Soon, Alerts W.H.O. Director

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – Latin America has started to resume normal social and public life at a time when the COVID-19 pandemic still requires major control interventions, World Health Organization regional director Carissa Etienne warned.

Coronavirus cases in Colombia’s border area with Venezuela have increased ten-fold over the past two weeks, Etienne said in a virtual briefing from Washington with other Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) directors.

Death rates are climbing in parts of Mexico, and similar trends are seen in Ecuador, Costa Rica, Bolivia, and in areas of Argentina, she said.

World Health Organization regional director Carissa Etienne.
World Health Organization regional director Carissa Etienne. (Photo: internet reproduction)

“Although the entire world is racing to develop new tools to prevent and cure COVID-19, a safe and effective vaccine that can be manufactured and delivered at scale is not around the corner,” Etienne alerted.

“We must be clear that opening up too early gives this virus more room to spread and puts our populations at greater risk. Look no further than Europe,” she said.

Etienne said governments must monitor travel very carefully because reopening to tourism can lead to setbacks. That has happened in the Caribbean, where several countries that had virtually no cases have experienced spikes as tourism resumed.

According to a Reuters tally, Latin America has recorded around 8.4 million coronavirus cases, and over 314,000 deaths, both figures being the highest of any region in the world.

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