Nigeria Records 790 COVID-19 Fresh Infections As Delta Leads In New Cases

Loading

Nigeria has recorded its highest daily figure of fresh COVID-19 cases. This is coming 24 hours into the relaxed lockdaown billed for another four weeks, starting from June 30. The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) announced 790 new cases in 20 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), at six minutes before midnight on Wednesday.

July 1 also witnessed a few more bitter/sweet milestones as Delta topped the list of states with 166 new infections, just as Nigeria’s total number of discharged patients crossed the 10,000 mark, while over 600 deaths have now been recorded.

While 406 people were discharged on Wednesday, bringing the total to 10,152 recoveries, 13 people were confirmed to have died of COVID-19 complications.

A total of 26,484 samples have now been confirmed positive in 35 states and the FCT.

790 new cases of #COVID19Nigeria;

Delta-166, Lagos-120, Enugu-66, FCT-65, Edo-60, Ogun-43, Kano-41, Kaduna-39, Ondo-33,
Rivers-32, Bayelsa-29, Katsina-21, Imo-20,
Kwara-18, Oyo-11, Abia-10, Benue-6, Gombe-4, Yobe-2, Bauchi-2, Kebbi-2.

26,484 confirmed
10,152 discharged
603 deaths pic.twitter.com/9fxpoeBZDP

— NCDC (@NCDCgov) July 1, 2020

Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation (WHO), has called on countries across the world to ensure that despite easing restrictions, guidelines on containing the pandemic are adhered to, as the number of positive cases is still expected to rise.

Tedros Ghebreyesus, director-general made the call while speaking at a press briefing on Wednesday,. Ghebreyesus disclosed that 60 percent of the more than 10 million cases recorded worldwide were confirmed in June.

Said he: “More than 10.3 million cases of COVID-19 have now been reported to WHO, and more than 506,000 deaths.

“For the past week, the number of new cases has exceeded 160,000 on every single day. 60% of all cases so far have been reported just in the past month.

“We will never get tired of saying that the best way out of this pandemic is to take a comprehensive approach.

“Find, isolate, test and care for every case, trace and quarantine every contact, equip and train health workers and educate and empower communities to protect themselves and others.

“Not testing alone. Not physical distancing alone. Not contact tracing alone. Not masks alone. Do it all. Countries that have adopted this comprehensive approach have suppressed transmission and saved lives.

“Flare-ups are to be expected as countries start to lift restrictions. But countries that have the systems in place to apply a comprehensive approach should be able to contain these flare-ups locally and avoid reintroducing widespread restrictions”.

Share This

Related posts

Leave a Comment