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COVID cases continue to fall globally, but yet another Omicron subvariant has appeared

Health worker in full-body protective suit walks next to a line of people
A health worker walks by residents waiting for coronavirus tests Wednesday in Beijing.
(Andy Wong / Associated Press)
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The number of coronavirus cases reported globally has dropped for a second consecutive week, and confirmed COVID-19 deaths also fell last week, according to a World Health Organization report issued Wednesday.

In its latest pandemic report, the United Nations health agency said 9 million cases were reported, a 16% weekly decline, and more than 26,000 new deaths were attributed to COVID-19. The WHO said confirmed coronavirus infections were down in all regions of the world.

However, it warned that the reported numbers carry considerable uncertainty because many countries have stopped widespread testing, meaning that many cases are likely going undetected.

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The agency said it was also tracking yet another Omicron variant that is a recombination of two versions: BA.1 and BA.2, which was first detected in Britain in January. The WHO said early estimates suggest that the recombined Omicron could be about 10% more transmissible than previous mutations, but further evidence is needed.

The increases are modest, and it’s unclear whether this a brief hiccup, the beginning of a larger wave of cases or something in between.

The agency has continued to warn countries not to drop their COVID-19 protocols too quickly and predicted that future variants could spread easily if surveillance and testing systems are shelved.

Last week, Britain said infections had hit record levels across the country, with government statistics estimating that about 1 in 13 people were infected. Those figures came on the same day the government abandoned distribution of free rapid tests.

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Meanwhile, Chinese authorities conducted more mass testing this week across Shanghai, which remains in lockdown after another jump in infections; the city has recorded more than 90,000 cases but no deaths during the pandemic.

Despite growing public frustration and concerns about economic effects, China says it is sticking to its hard-line “zero-tolerance” approach involving lockdowns, mass testing and the compulsory isolation of all suspected cases and close contacts. After a public uproar, Shanghai authorities said Wednesday that they would allow at least some parents to stay with children infected with the coronavirus, making an exception to a policy of isolating anyone who tests positive.

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