Infection assessment | More than 2,581,000 people died worldwide

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France Media Agency

More than 116,031,470 cases of infection have been officially diagnosed since the onset of the epidemic. Most patients recover, but the more poorly assessed area retains symptoms for weeks or months. These figures are based on daily reports from health officials in each country and exclude former post-corrections by statistical agencies such as Russia, Spain and the United Kingdom.

On Friday, 10,685 new deaths and 450,657 new cases were reported worldwide. With 2,530 new deaths, the United States, Brazil (1,800) and Mexico (712) are the countries with the highest number of new deaths in recent reports.

The United States is the most affected country in both deaths and cases, with 522,879 deaths out of 28,895,047 cases, according to Johns Hopkins University figures. After the United States, the worst-affected countries are Brazil with 262,770 deaths and 10,869,227 cases, Mexico with 189,578 deaths (2,119,305 cases), India with 157,656 deaths (11,192,088 cases), and the United Kingdom with 124,261 deaths (4,207,30 cases). Among the most affected countries, the Czech Republic has the highest number of deaths per 100,000 population, followed by Belgium (192), Slovenia (187), the United Kingdom (183) and Montenegro (167) per 100,000 population.

Europe Saturday at 6 a.m. 38,427,275 cases, Latin America and the Caribbean 693,735 deaths (21,875,286 cases), USA and Canada 545,063 deaths (29,775,553 cases), Asia 259,009 deaths (16,308,187 cases), Middle East 105,26,55,55,55,55 3,950,208 cases), Oceania 951 deaths (32,637 cases).

Since the onset of the epidemic, the number of tests performed has drastically increased and screening and tracking techniques have improved, leading to an increase in reported contaminants. However, the number of cases detected represents only a fraction of the actual total contamination, with the vast majority of less serious or asymptomatic cases still undiagnosed.

The assessment was carried out using data collected by AFP offices from competent national officials and information from the World Health Organization (WHO). Due to corrections made by officials or delayed release of data, the 24-hour increase figures do not exactly match those released the previous day.

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