The World Health Organization's (WHO's) director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, PhD warned that shortages of personal protective equipment (PPE) such as gowns are masks could leave frontline health workers unprotected from the COVID-19 virus, which comes as the epicenter shifts from China to three nations on three different continents.
Dr Tedros said China over the past day reported its lowest number of new cases of the novel coronavirus disease since Jan 20. Of nearly 2,000 cases reported in the rest of the world, though, 80% were from South Korea, Iran, and Italy.
Disruptions in the supply of PPE are severe and increasing because of hoarding, misuse, and increased demand, he said. Surgical mask prices have increased sixfold, N95 respirator prices have tripled, and gown costs have doubled. The WHO has shipped 500,000 sets of PPE to 27 countries, but supplies are rapidly depleting. It estimates that PPE supplies need to increase by 40%, and Dr. Tedros again called on manufacturers to rapidly scale up production and urged governments to offer incentives to boost supplies, including easing restrictions on the export and distribution of PPE and other medical supplies.
"This cannot be solved by WHO alone, or one industry alone. It requires all of us working together to ensure all countries can protect the people who protect the rest of us."
At a recent WHO briefing, Mike Ryan, MD, who directs the WHO's health emergencies program, said that, of the recent hot spots, health officials are most concerned about Iran, including about the supply of equipment such as ventilators. He said a WHO mission is in its second day there and added that a team from China is on hand to assist. Ryan said the country has a tough challenge, because the virus is well established in many cities. "It's not impossible to root out, but it is difficult work, and medical supplies are essential."
In other news:
· South Korea reported 600 more cases, plus two more deaths, raising its overall total to 4,812 illnesses, 28 of them fatal.
· Iran's health ministry reported 835 new cases, along with 11 more deaths, lifting its respective totals to 2,336 cases and 77 deaths.
· In China, the country's National Health Commission (NHC) reported 125 more cases, 114 of them in Hubei province, and of those, 111 are in Wuhan. China's overall total is now 80,151 cases. The NHC also reported 31 more deaths and 304 fewer serious cases, bringing those respective totals to 2,943 and 6,806.
· In another development, China yesterday reported 7 cases imported from Italy, all involving people who worked at the same restaurant as a woman who got sick after returning from Italy, Rome's ANSA news agency reported. China's state media has reported that travelers from other COVID-19 hot spots, such as South Korea, Japan, Iran, and Italy, will be quarantined for 14 days in some parts of China, the BBC reported.
· Meanwhile, Japan's health ministry reported 16 more cases in eight prefectures, raising its total to 257. However, it lists its overall total as 284, with 27 asymptomatic carriers. And Singapore reported two new cases, one of them linked to a workplace cluster, raising its total to 110.
· Italy reported 466 new cases, along with 27 more deaths, boosting its total to 2,502 cases, 79 of them fatal. The health ministry's latest report shows that 1,520 of the country's cases are from the hard-hit Lombardy region.
· Elsewhere in Europe, the United Kingdom, which has 51 cases now published its coronavirus response plan, which has a four-tiered approach that starts with the current containment phase. It said the next phase involves delaying the spread to avoid overlap with the flu season and an added burden to the health system.
· Elsewhere, Spain announced its first COVID-19 death, in a patient from Valencia. The country has at least 145 cases, including 49 in Madrid. And Ukraine reported its first case, which involves a man who had traveled from Italy.
· Australia today reported its first case involving community transmission, in a doctor with no relevant travel history or connection to a confirmed case. Government officials signaled plans to use a rarely used law to enforce quarantine.
· The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) announced $37 million targeted to 25 affected or high-risk countries. It said the support is the first funds committed from an earlier pledge of up to $100 million.
· The WHO's Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) announced the rollout of an online platform to help with case and contact data for COVID-19 in Latin American countries.